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Synonyms

immoderately

American  
[i-mahd-er-it-lee] / ɪˈmɑd ər ɪt li /

adverb

  1. in a way that is not moderate; excessively or extremely.


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.

Their North Star, Irene, played by Parker Posey, is a moderately successful and immoderately self-involved actress who is “theater famous, not famous famous.”

From New York Times • Feb. 28, 2023

“So, for ten minutes or so, we played with the insect, making it run up and down each other’s arms, and laughing immoderately, so that all the other passengers obviously doubted our sanity.”

From Washington Post • Feb. 4, 2021

He was toweringly tall and as immoderately bearded as Michele.

From The New Yorker • Sep. 12, 2016

My mother wasn’t conventionally religious but she was immoderately literate, an old-fashioned freethinker and lover of the classics with a skeptical, irreverent turn of mind.

From Slate • Jan. 9, 2013

Her joke of a name aside, her general unprettiness aside, she was—in terms of permanently memorable, immoderately perceptive, small-area faces—a stunning and final girl.

From "Nine Stories" by J. D. Salinger