View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Exorbitantly.

Exorbitantly

Exorbitantly | Exorbitant

Exorbitantly meaning

In an exorbitant manner, excessively.

Synonyms of Exorbitantly

Example sentences (14)

Citing Alaska’s “exorbitantly high energy costs,” Dunleavy established the task force through an executive order in February.

Don't go exorbitantly over your budget, but finding a controller that hits a majority of your creature comforts will be well worth it and probably last longer than a cheapo controller that can be bought on a whim.

For the first time in the history of the country, Naira was openly and exorbitantly traded for Naira.

On their online communities, people often share contacts for finding cheaper sources of Continuous Glucose Monitors (CGM) which are exorbitantly priced.

In 2018, it reportedly had an 8% firing rate—above the 6% average for American companies, but not exorbitantly so.

On the opposite side, maybe that goal is exorbitantly viably come to or the opening is unnecessarily sweeping.

But under the Jones Act, foreign-originating goods must be dropped off in Jacksonville and then shipped to Puerto Rico via an exorbitantly expensive Jones-compliant vessel.

Prince George: dittybopper: doomjesse: Well at least the next terror attack will take out exorbitantly rich people.

The Confederation of Zimbabwe Industry (CZI) president, Sifelani Jabangwe is reported to have stated that retailers were exorbitantly profiteering to the detriment of the consumers.

As Burgundy has gained popularity around the world in recent decades, these grand cru wines, made in minute quantities, have become exorbitantly expensive, leading in part to counterfeiting, as in the Kurniawan case.

I seem the recall something from way back in the early days of video rental, that the studios charged an exorbitantly high price for the videos.

It is exorbitantly high in some countries like Greece, where more than one in five people are out of work.

We can't wait to be served some exorbitantly priced radishes, forked to death on a slice of sourdough.

There is no other 17th-century artist who employed the exorbitantly expensive pigments lapis lazuli or natural ultramarine either so lavishly or so early in his career.