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egregious
/ -dʒɪəs, ɪˈɡriːdʒəs /
adjective
outstandingly bad; flagrant
an egregious lie
archaic, distinguished; eminent
Other Word Forms
- egregiously adverb
- egregiousness noun
- nonegregious adjective
- nonegregiously adverb
- nonegregiousness noun
- unegregious adjective
- unegregiously adverb
- unegregiousness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of egregious1
Word History and Origins
Origin of egregious1
Example Sentences
Proven incidents of teams circumventing the cap are few, with a violation by the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2000 serving as the most egregious.
The Echo reported that Caroline Goodwin KC, defence counsel for Morgan, told the judge that the post was in her analysis "appalling, outrageous and egregious" and that Jenrick "should know better".
The lawyers also argued that the multi-million punitive damages award should be discarded or significantly reduced because such punishment requires clear evidence of "egregious wrongdoing" by the manufacturer.
Sheinbaum has said repeatedly that her government views any unilateral U.S. action on Mexican territory as an egregious violation of sovereignty.
Like last year, Brady can’t “egregiously criticize officials,” said McCarthy, who added there were no issues along those lines in 2024.
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