Crossword clues for arrogantly
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Arrogantly \Ar"ro*gant*ly\, adv. In an arrogant manner; with undue pride or self-importance.
Wiktionary
adv. In an arrogant manner; with undue pride or self-importance.
WordNet
adv. in an arrogant manner; "in the old days she had been harsh and stiff ; afraid of her husband and yet arrogantly proud that she had a husband strong and fierce enough to make her afraid"
Usage examples of "arrogantly".
He grinned arrogantly and swung the tommy gun toward them, but did not fire.
Unless the men in question had been well-trained and arrogantly believed themselves invincible.
Garner bested him by two or three inches in height, but their shoulders were of equal width and, in profile, their noses had the same straight slope and sharp tip and the same arrogantly flared nostrils.
Byron harrumphed wordless disbelief and shifted arrogantly in his chair, motioning for the final course.
I had assumed, arrogantly I suppose, that she would be overcome with gratitude.
And yet these exceptions are either too few in number, or too recent in time, entirely to remove the imputation of ignorance and obscurity which has been so arrogantly cast on the first proselytes of Christianity.
Almost arrogantly the slim lad turned and strode to the settee where Leala sat.
Alaina railed at her quivering cousin, then she straightened, almost calmly, and strode arrogantly about the kitchen.
He paused to let them digest the documents and his announcement before arrogantly examining the nails of his left hand.
Beside him was a taller, more assured youth, arrogantly swaggering into the lens, dripping with self-importance.
Baxley, in a clean uniform, stood stiffly at attention as Brother President Kyle Murrel strode in arrogantly, escorted by helmeted Brothertroops.
The Disciples presented figures that would have done Bacchanalia itself proud, Roman gladiators never presented a more frightening or arrogantly cruel picture than they did.
Hashed arrogantly past the commercial craft on its way to the private docking bays, and pulled up with a whine of nullgravs at the entrance ramp of a yacht painted in the blue and silver of the Royal House of Sapne.
The sun climbed arrogantly up to his place above all other things, and as Hagadorn took off his skates and glanced carelessly lakeward, he beheld a great wind-rift in the ice, and the waves showing blue and hungry between white fields.
As Hoorn finished, a young man, tall for Makassar, once quite muscular but now thin like the others, strode arrogantly across the room, his head high in contrast to the locals MacKinnie had seen.