View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Cavalierly.

Cavalierly

Cavalierly | Cavaliers | Cavalier

Cavalierly meaning

In a cavalier manner.

Synonyms of Cavalierly

Example sentences (12)

One narrative cavalierly peddled by the Obi/LP’s vociferous social media mob is that the February 25 presidential election was the worst ever in Nigeria’s history.

The indictment alleged that Mr Trump repeatedly enlisted aides and lawyers to help him hide records demanded by investigators and cavalierly showed off a Pentagon “plan of attack” and classified map.

Not when statutes and standards are so cavalierly violated.

Roth “cavalierly” questioned the corrections department’s findings that Childs had lied, a disciplinary committee later found.

And when White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany was pressed on Fox Business about whether Trump would attend the inauguration in January, she cavalierly replied: “I think the President will attend his own inauguration.

But, in the morning after, some folks were still scratching their heads that Justice Holder would issue an injunction in a matter that’s riveted the attention of the world (only slight hyperbole!) so cavalierly!

Shortly after the podcast was released, the Canadian political establishment at the prospect of an ISIS fighter cavalierly walking the streets of Toronto.

Some city residents, she judges, have treated her coronavirus lockdown mandate to stay home a little too cavalierly, gathering in parks to ride bikes, run and stroll with baby carriages.

We have seen the petty tyrant governors and mayors use this time to overreach and cavalierly brush aside constitutional rights in the name of safety.

When the executive acts in secret, it is easier for the executive to treat those values more cavalierly, and it is harder for the public to identify when the executive has done so.

D. Peter Jahrling, an over-compensating know-it-all who initially brushes off Jaax’s findings, cavalierly sniffing lab samples as if he’s a perfumer and inviting his colleague Ben Gellis (Paul James) to do the same.

Yet in the cases reviewed here, it is imposed, often apparently cavalierly and without even a trial, for reasons that amount to a punishment for being poor.