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Discover Ludwig'pugnaciously' is a correct and usable word in written English
It is an adverb that means in a combative or aggressive manner. Example: The boxer entered the ring with a pugnacious attitude, ready to defeat his opponent at any cost.
Dictionary
pugnaciously
adverb
In an aggressive or combative manner.
Exact(50)
His youth will lull activists into the illusion of change, the analogy goes, but he will not force them out of their ideological comfort-zone.Less likely to win is the pugnaciously shrewd Ed Balls (pictured right), who worked with the younger Miliband in Mr Brown's entourage.
"Rogernomics" was his finance minister Roger Douglas's antidote to Rob Muldoon, the pugnaciously populist prime minister Lange defeated in 1984, who had kept a creaking agriculture-based economy afloat with subsidies, protective controls and borrowing.
Either way, he has snapped at the heels of the dominant firms in European industry more pugnaciously than his smoother predecessors, Peter Sutherland and Sir Leon, and has consequently acquired many more enemies.
American political journalist and commentator who wrote the influential syndicated newspaper column "Inside Report" for more than 40 years and from 1980 pugnaciously espoused a conservative viewpoint on a number of political television talk shows, notably CNN's Crossfire.
No, the ones off to the right are more blockish, more pugnaciously substantial.
Stallone is having the time of his life, not least with the script's buddy comedy, its plethora of cringe-inducing gags regarding stereotypes of Asians ("put some pow in your pencil" is one that comes to mind), and pugnaciously sardonic one-liners delivered with infinitesimal sneers and fractionally arched eyebrows.
"Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth" turns out to be a pugnaciously written, unduly self-assured, and, on the whole, extremely conventional view of the historical Jesus, already familiar to those who keep up with contemporary Jesus studies.
"I don't like good taste," he liked to say, pugnaciously.
The group pugnaciously opposes censorship, and became hostile toward Scientology after the church invoked copyright claims in order to remove from the Internet the video of Tom Cruise extolling "K.S.W".
His shoulders shifted pugnaciously.
In the last few seasons, Wilpon has held spring training news conferences in Port St . Lucie Fla., in which he has consistently, and sometimes pugnaciously, maintained that he was not selling the team despite the financial stress caused by his connection to the fraud perpetrated by Bernard L. Madoff.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com