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Discover Ludwig'brusquely' is a perfectly correct and usable word in written English.
You can use it to describe someone that speaks or carries out an action in a blunt or abrupt way, without courtesy or sensitivity. For example, "John spoke to the customer brusquely, not realizing that he was already upset."
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She brusquely informed him that, now the family had been discovered, the funeral would be halted.
"Well, she'd better," interjected the candidate's mother, brusquely.
In October the finance minister, Peer Steinbrück, brusquely rejected a French-backed plan for a common fund to rescue banks, fearing that Germans would pay for the mistakes of bankers in other countries.
Mr Dervis pulled back after Mr Cem brusquely turned down Mr Baykal's invitation to join forces under the CHP banner.
Demands from opposition parties, and from some donors, for more civilian and local oversight were brusquely turned down.
"And I'm actually around to see them, because there are set hours".In this section Sobriety at the Carnival The ghost in the Planalto Fine, as long as we win Of recyclers and rag men ReprintsOther groups are seen as nuisances and are being dealt with brusquely.
No, said my friend, more brusquely this time, and slid the hatch shut.There was nothing so quaint about this week's incursions.
Until recently the Iranians had played hard to get, sometimes sounding keen to talk but at other times saying brusquely that they saw no point.
The government in Madrid insists that this is illegal under the constitution, which declares the indivisibility of the nation.France's constitution brusquely defines French as the language of the Republic.
When he tentatively tries to ask about the treatment of minorities, the governor brusquely interrupts to say that "we have no minorities in Turkey".In reality Turkey today is a multi-ethnic, multifaith society.
Obituaries were perfunctory: most took the same tone as the General Advertiser, which brusquely reported that Kent had died "of a Mortification of his Bowels".A new show aims to bring "Kentissime"—a term coined by Walpole back to the limelight.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com