What's the difference between ungenerous and ungenerously?
Ungenerous
Definition:
(a.) Not generous; illiberal; ignoble; unkind; dishonorable.
Example Sentences:
(1) Who wants to be seen with that narrow, ungenerous and (to the rest of Canada) irritating thing, a separatist?
(2) That would only happen if there was a remarkable run on the pound this year - so the odds feel a little ungenerous.
(3) If you were being ungenerous, you might say such headlines make a nice change.
(4) The show was hosted by Ricky Gervais – who not quite the same version of himself that hosted last year's event, when he attracted criticism for an extended absence from stage and for striking an ungenerous tone.
(5) And just as the healthcare debates have been disrupted by an astonishing amount of hateful speech, so the national blogosphere is filled with bitter, ungenerous commentary about the time he cheated on an exam at Harvard; or how he called his political advisers before he called paramedics when his car plunged off a bridge on Martha's Vineyard, leaving the body of Mary Jo Kopechne, a young campaign aide, submerged for nearly nine hours; or whetherhe drank to excess.
(6) They play on people's fears and anxieties, pushing a view of the world that is backwards and ungenerous.
(7) It may be the case that, as Clegg says, an "ungenerous, backwards-looking politics has emerged in Britain".
(8) The money will have to be repaid, and repaid at ungenerous rates of interest: in this case, 5.2%.
(9) An ungenerous, backwards-looking politics has emerged in Britain ," Clegg said.
(10) I have never had Monbiot down as an ungenerous character, but to ignore all of this in favour of blowing up a controversy around one small part of the negotiations, known as investor protection, seems to me positively Scrooge-like.
(11) But that’s not to say the fight isn’t on for the future of our country too.” Although he is not expected to mention Ukip or Farage in his speech, he will warn: “An ungenerous, backwards-looking politics has emerged in Britain.
(12) Keen on working in England, he threw his hat into the managerial ring when Roy Keane parted with Sunderland last December but the Wearside's club's far from ungenerous board were deterred by the Italian's salary demands.
(13) Faced by a journalist's microphone, Bush is reserved, dry, ungenerous – the exact opposite of how she is faced by a microphone in a recording studio.
(14) An ungenerous, backwards looking politics has emerged in Britain."
(15) I get the impression she quite likes this image, though she says the programme was ungenerous to the Budworths.
(16) An ungenerous, backwards-looking politics has emerged in Britain."
(17) It would be ungenerous to doubt the good intentions of Michael Moritz, chairman of the California-based Sequoia Capital, and his wife, Harriet Heyman, who have pledged £75m to launch the fund and, in return, will have the pleasure of generations of students being called Moritz-Heyman scholars just as some Etonians are called King's scholars .
Ungenerously
Definition:
(adv.) In an ungenerous manner.
Example Sentences:
(1) Who wants to be seen with that narrow, ungenerous and (to the rest of Canada) irritating thing, a separatist?
(2) That would only happen if there was a remarkable run on the pound this year - so the odds feel a little ungenerous.
(3) If you were being ungenerous, you might say such headlines make a nice change.
(4) The show was hosted by Ricky Gervais – who not quite the same version of himself that hosted last year's event, when he attracted criticism for an extended absence from stage and for striking an ungenerous tone.
(5) And just as the healthcare debates have been disrupted by an astonishing amount of hateful speech, so the national blogosphere is filled with bitter, ungenerous commentary about the time he cheated on an exam at Harvard; or how he called his political advisers before he called paramedics when his car plunged off a bridge on Martha's Vineyard, leaving the body of Mary Jo Kopechne, a young campaign aide, submerged for nearly nine hours; or whetherhe drank to excess.
(6) They play on people's fears and anxieties, pushing a view of the world that is backwards and ungenerous.
(7) It may be the case that, as Clegg says, an "ungenerous, backwards-looking politics has emerged in Britain".
(8) The money will have to be repaid, and repaid at ungenerous rates of interest: in this case, 5.2%.
(9) An ungenerous, backwards-looking politics has emerged in Britain ," Clegg said.
(10) I have never had Monbiot down as an ungenerous character, but to ignore all of this in favour of blowing up a controversy around one small part of the negotiations, known as investor protection, seems to me positively Scrooge-like.
(11) But that’s not to say the fight isn’t on for the future of our country too.” Although he is not expected to mention Ukip or Farage in his speech, he will warn: “An ungenerous, backwards-looking politics has emerged in Britain.
(12) Keen on working in England, he threw his hat into the managerial ring when Roy Keane parted with Sunderland last December but the Wearside's club's far from ungenerous board were deterred by the Italian's salary demands.
(13) Faced by a journalist's microphone, Bush is reserved, dry, ungenerous – the exact opposite of how she is faced by a microphone in a recording studio.
(14) An ungenerous, backwards looking politics has emerged in Britain."
(15) I get the impression she quite likes this image, though she says the programme was ungenerous to the Budworths.
(16) An ungenerous, backwards-looking politics has emerged in Britain."
(17) It would be ungenerous to doubt the good intentions of Michael Moritz, chairman of the California-based Sequoia Capital, and his wife, Harriet Heyman, who have pledged £75m to launch the fund and, in return, will have the pleasure of generations of students being called Moritz-Heyman scholars just as some Etonians are called King's scholars .