importunately

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importunately
importunately, adv. (ɪmˈpɔːtjuːnətlɪ) [f. importunate a. + -ly2.] In an importunate manner. † 1. Inopportunely, untimely, unseasonably. Obs.1529 More Suppl. Soulys Wks. 288/2 We do..not yet importunatelye bereue you of your rest with cryinge at youre eares at vnseasonable tyme. 1658–9 Burton's Diary... Oxford English Dictionary
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importunately
importunatelyadv. 牛津英汉双解词典
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Robert Pierce
Pastor Richard Halverson wrote that Pierce "prayed more earnestly and importunately than anyone else I have ever known. wikipedia.org
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besiegingly
beˈsiegingly, adv. rare. [f. prec. + -ly2.] Urgently, importunately.1822 De Quincey Confess. Wks. I. 270 Any particular death..haunts my mind more obstinately and besiegingly, in that season. Oxford English Dictionary
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Peddle - definition of peddle by The Free Dictionary
peddle. 1. (Commerce) to go from place to place selling (goods, esp small articles) 2. (Recreational Drugs) ( tr) to sell (illegal drugs, esp narcotics) 3. ( tr) to advocate (ideas) persistently or importunately: to peddle a new philosophy.
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importunably
† imˈportunably, adv. Obs. [f. prec. + -ly2.] Persistently, pertinaciously; importunately.1502 W. Atkynson tr. De Imitatione i. xiii. 161 The deuyl..with a thousande snaris and subtilties importunably assaylynge vs. Oxford English Dictionary
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Psychiatric disorders of childbirth
These extreme cases illustrate the strong wish that some women have to bring pregnancy to an end; occasionally they importunately demand premature delivery wikipedia.org
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pressingly
ˈpressingly, adv. [f. pressing ppl. a. + -ly2.] In a pressing manner; urgently; importunately.1642 Howell For. Trav. (Arb.) 33 The one contracts and enchaines his words, and speakes pressingly and short. a 1661 B. Holyday Juvenal 125 First, in respect of the express testimonie of the poet;..secondly... Oxford English Dictionary
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George Marshall-Hall
Contemporaries remarked on his loud laughter and his habit of humming operatic airs as he strode around town, of tapping his baton importunately on the wikipedia.org
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obtrusively
obtrusively, adv. (əbˈtruːsɪvlɪ) [f. prec. + -ly2.] In an obtrusive manner; so as to obtrude.1817 Coleridge Biog. Lit. I. x. 191, I have seen gross intolerance shewn in support of tolerance; sectarian antipathy most obtrusively displayed. 1849 Macaulay Hist. Eng. x. II. 646 His advice was never aske... Oxford English Dictionary
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importunator
importunator (ɪmˈpɔːtjuːneɪtə(r)) [agent-n. in L. form from importunate v.] One who importunes, or solicits importunately.1604 Sandys Relat. St. Relig. West Pts. I iv b, Tyrannous importunators, and exactors of their own men. 1825 New Monthly Mag. XIV. 418 A flowing and ebbing of petitioners, claima... Oxford English Dictionary
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importunate
▪ I. importunate, a. (n.) (ɪmˈpɔːtjuːnət) [f. L. importūn-us + -ate2. The use of the suffix is peculiar; perh. after obstinate, fortunate, temperate, or other adjs. expressing personal qualities.] † 1. Inopportune, unseasonable, untimely; = importune a. 1. Obs.1529 [implied in importunately 1]. 1552... Oxford English Dictionary
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urgently
ˈurgently, adv. [-ly2.] In an urgent manner.1548 Udall, etc. Erasm. Par. John xix. 108 b, Therfore the Jewes called more vrgentely vpon the matter. 1611 Cotgr., Importunément, importunately, vrgently, earnestly. 1789 in C. F. Jenkins Tortola (1923) 90, I thank thee for thy kind advice thou hast so u... Oxford English Dictionary
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importunely
imporˈtunely, adv. Now rare. Also 6 in-. [f. importune a. + -ly2.] † 1. Inopportunely, unseasonably. Obs.c 1425 Found. St. Bartholomew's (E.E.T.S.) 25 He mevid hym..with goode and honeste wordes, opportunely and importunely. 1609 Bible (Douay) Isa. lviii. Comm., Gods preachers must crie, and not cea... Oxford English Dictionary
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imprecate
imprecate, v. (ˈɪmprɪkeɪt) [f. L. imprecāt-, ppl. stem of imprecārī, in senses 1 and 2, f. im- (im-1) + precārī to pray.] 1. trans. To pray for, invoke (something, usually from a deity). a. To invoke or call down (evil or calamity) upon a person.1613 Purchas Pilgrimage (1614) 216 The falling sicknes... Oxford English Dictionary
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