stoutly [
'stautli]
ad. 刚强地, 坚决地
stoutly[ adv ]
in a resolute manner
<adv.all>
he was stoutly replying to his critics
Stoutly \Stout"ly\, adv.
In a stout manner; lustily; boldly; obstinately; as, he
stoutly defended himself.
- Somehow, on the basis of fragmentary or poorly interpreted evidence or perhaps simply the assertion of a leading practitioner, a particular test or operation becomes standard medical practice, and then evidence to the contrary is stoutly resisted.
- While the Bonn government wavers on the issue, which is pencilled into the Maastricht Treaty on economic and political union, German industry stoutly rejected the idea.
- Commercialization in the form of corporate sponsorship has been stoutly resisted.
- In an interview, Mr. Weingarten stoutly denied that he had been pushed out.
- But Norman's defenders still stoutly insist that his party membership ended before he entered Canada's Department of External Affairs in 1939, and that he never engaged in espionage.
- But if the talk focuses on the export of jobs from the developed world to Asia, the risk is that protection could come back on to the agenda via the back door - an outcome that should be stoutly resisted.
- He has stoutly denied that the wound to his abdomen was self-inflicted.
- Within the auto industry, Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee Iacocca supports a tax increase, but General Motors Corp. is stoutly opposed to it on grounds that it would hammer the economy.
- Far from feeling shameful at committing such sacrilege, Oliva stoutly defends his product: 'It looks like beer, it tastes like beer and it has a head, too,' he says.
- Helms, speaking under oath, stoutly denied Cranston attorney William W. Taylor III's accusation that he had already made up his mind in the case.