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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Unsparingly

Unsparing \Un*spar"ing\, a. [Pref. un- not + sparing, p. pr. of spare.]

  1. Not sparing; not parsimonious; liberal; profuse.
    --Burke.

  2. Not merciful or forgiving. [R.]
    --Milton. [1913 Webster] -- Un*spar"ing*ly, adv. -- Un*spar"ing*ness, n.

Wiktionary
unsparingly

adv. In an unsparing manner.

WordNet
unsparingly

adv. in a scathing and unsparing manner; "she criticized him scathingly" [syn: scathingly]

Usage examples of "unsparingly".

Yossarian busted Nately in the nose on Thanksgiving Day, after everyone in the squadron had given humble thanks to Milo for providing the fantastically opulent meal on which the officers and enlisted men had gorged themselves insatiably all afternoon and for dispensing like inexhaustible largess the unopened bottles of cheap whiskey he handed out unsparingly to every man who asked.

He visited repeatedly the Field Lane School, in a district near Holborn notoriously frequented by the criminal classes, and soon the cause, at which he was to work unsparingly for forty years, began to move forward.

In their circle the most striking figure was Elizabeth Fry, who from 1813 to her death in 1843 devoted herself unsparingly to the cause of prison reform.

She was propped up by pillows, and through the little window looking westward the afternoon sun blazed unsparingly on the discoloured face of the sick woman, speechlessly rigid.

During the following years he was the most conspicuous theologian of the day, dreaded and hated by his opponents, whom he unsparingly bullied, and dominating a small clique of abject admirers.

As, one by one, the horses were dragged off and killed and the riders in all their blood-soaked disguises were pulled and shifted, Richard and he worked unsparingly, looking always for one man.

In his Memoirs, he speaks unsparingly of his compatriot and yet, as M.

It is proper, however, to inform them, that some of the positions maintained in these pages have been unsparingly attacked, with various degrees of ability, scholarship, and good-breeding.

They were all driven along without any attempt at order, the havildars using their whips unsparingly upon them whenever they showed signs of flagging.