[ adv ] in an enthusiastically glowing manner <adv.all> in her letter she praised him glowingly
Glowingly \Glow"ing*ly\, adv. In a glowing manner; with ardent heat or passion.
And it was sung glowingly! One felt the women's real attempts not to fall for the new men _ and the men's pain when they did.
Still, Mr. Robinson does seem to go out of his way to paint King Fahd as a benighted figure too dumb to bask in the radiance of his glowingly intelligent minister.
Many here refer glowingly to the "prairie ethic," the toughness of the early German and Scandinavian settlers who a century ago turned this harsh land into the nation's leading wheat producer.
In the years before the insider trading scandal, the financial media wrote glowingly of Milken.
An executive at one of the Midwest's biggest industrial companies glowingly describes how Proudfoot helped him trim about 400 workers from a 1,700-person data processing and computer center.
In response, O'Connor said, Castro praised the American church for its work and spoke glowingly of the pope.
Behind all the action, Minks's cyclorama - in the aching hot yellow with which Picasso once realised Spain onstage in Le Tricorne - glowingly speaks of heat, sand, sun, and of a sensuous condition before which all politics and dominion are petty.
He speaks glowingly of Western democracy and mixed economies but at the same time feels Russia (as opposed to the Soviet Union) has lost its "spiritual, national and economic independence."
President Bush has spoken glowingly of the importance of the nonprofits as the "thousand points of light."
To be sure, the U.S. economy is not glowingly healthy.