Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Our American partners are able to defend their national interests pugnaciously.
"There are three of us,' the first voice declared pugnaciously.
Some of the men kept their heads high, pugnaciously.
She continued with her questions, but less pugnaciously, asking about his positions on defense, social programs, and agriculture.
There was almost nobody to be seen, but Mike pressed his lips pugnaciously together as they got out of the car and went inside.
Leslie had sensed her husband's hesitation and spoke almost pugnaciously.
"I can fight for my own hand all right," said Jane, her small chin lifting itself pugnaciously.
She moved forward, crossing her arms pugnaciously over her chest.
After a moment's hesitation, though, the larger of the two men thrust out his chin pugnaciously.
He stood there, in the glare of the lights, pugnaciously rolling up his sleeves.
He did it a bit pugnaciously, of course.
"That's what a guy told me," said Hill pugnaciously.
Nodding pugnaciously to Johnstone, he climbed into the car and drove off.
He suddenly exploded into anger, jaw thrust out pugnaciously, dark eyes gleaming.
When Ray did not reply, the man's brutal jaw thrust forward pugnaciously.
Raphael stopped and turned toward Flood, his jaw thrust forward pugnaciously.
He drew in his head and squinted pugnaciously at Doctor Bliss.
Then she gulped, tried to giggle, thrust out her chin pugnaciously.
He lifted his chin pugnaciously over his basket of manure.
He thrust his jaw out pugnaciously as he rose to his feet.
On fast attack before suspicion, urged one pugnaciously.
"We'll go down and talk to this Don Loris," he said pugnaciously.
She released the door and swung back to face him, her delicate jaw tilting upward pugnaciously.
He seems incapable of not talking - pugnaciously and relentlessly - to sharpen his sense that something is always happening on a baseball field.
Needless to say, they are American wines: where else in the world would wines be described so pugnaciously?