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outlandishly

American  
[aut-land-ish-lee] / ˌaʊtˈlænd ɪʃ li /

adverb

  1. in a way or to a degree that is outlandish.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Somewhere between a yearning for motherhood and a woman’s understandable hesitation about it is where the bulk of O’Hara’s onscreen interpretations lived — confidently, outlandishly, and except for Kate, clad in eccentricity.

From Salon

The renderings for the Warner Center redesign feature buildings that are sleek and modern but not outlandishly daring or unconventional.

From Los Angeles Times

The surface pleasures of “Y2K” are outlandishly fun, but plot-wise, the film is structurally unsound.

From Los Angeles Times

Rick Owens mixed gothic elements with a touch of the bizarre, featuring oversized rubber boots that Owens himself described as outlandishly proportioned.

From Seattle Times

“Nobody is using poultry to trick someone into marrying them,” Leive said, “but I do think that there’s something about chicken. It’s not outlandishly expensive, it cuts across cultures, feels homey.”

From Seattle Times