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Definition of Immoderately
1. Adverb. Without moderation; in an immoderate manner. "He eats immoderately"
2. Adverb. To a degree that exceeds the bounds or reason or moderation. "His prices are unreasonably high"
Definition of Immoderately
1. adv. In an immoderate manner; excessively.
Definition of Immoderately
1. Adverb. In an immoderate manner. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Immoderately
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Immoderately
Literary usage of Immoderately
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Forms of Pleading in Actions for Legal Or Equitable Relief: Prepared with by Austin Abbott, Carlos Coolidge Alden (1898)
"For immoderately Driving a Horse. I. That on or about the day of , IS , at ...
That the defendant drove the horse so immoderately, and so neglected the care ..."
2. An American Glossary by Richard Hopwood Thornton (1912)
"At a great rate ; immoderately. what she was at.—Knick Mag., xlviii. 433 (Oct.).
1862 'Twas Concord Bridge a talkin' off to kill 1856 Then she laughed fit ..."
3. Forms of Practice, Or, American Precedents in Personal and Real Actions by Benjamin Lynde Oliver (1851)
"Overloading and immoderately driving a horse. For that the plaintiff, on &c., at
Sfc., had delivered to the said Ea certain gelding of the ..."
4. Lord Byron and Some of His Contemporaries by Leigh Hunt (1828)
"through the verses without understanding twentieth part of them, but now and then
laughing immoderately at the rhymes and similes, and catching a bit of ..."
5. The Practice in Civil Actions and Proceedings at Law, in Ohio, and by Joseph Rockwell Swan (1845)
"immoderately Driving a Horse, (g) For that, the said D., on [&c.] at [&c.], hired
of the plaintiff a certain horse of the plaintiff, to ride from A. to B., ..."
6. Herodotus: A New and Literal Version from the Text of Baehr, with a by Herodotus, Henry Cary, Johann Christian Felix Bähr (1852)
"While detained there, they got more food than on their march, and having filled
themselves immoderately, and changed their water, a great part of the army ..."