inhumanly

  • 111ruthlessly — adv heartlessly, mercilessly, pitilessly, unmercifully, unpityingly; relentlessly, remorselessly, inexorably, implacably; with a vengeance, without mercy, spitefully, unforgivingly; unscrupulously, without feeling, without compassion, without… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 112Yuki Ona — (OO key OWN ah) Variation: Yuki Onna, Yuki Onne In Japanese lore there is a type of vampiric spirit known as a yuki ona ( snow woman ). It levitates rather than walks and appears to its victims as a tall and beautiful woman with impossibly long… …

    Encyclopedia of vampire mythology

  • 113inhuman — /ɪnˈhjumən / (say in hyoohmuhn) adjective 1. lacking natural human feeling or sympathy for others; brutal. 2. not human. {late Middle English unhumayn, from Latin inhūmānus. See in 3} –inhumanly, adverb –inhumanness, noun …

  • 114murder — /ˈmɜdə / (say merduh) noun 1. Law the unlawful killing of a human being by an act done with intention to kill or to inflict grievous bodily harm, or with reckless indifference to human life. 2. Colloquial an uncommonly laborious or difficult task …

  • 115brutally — [adv] cruelly, without remorse atrociously, barbarically, barbarously, brutishly, callously, demoniacally, diabolically, ferally, ferociously, fiercely, hardheartedly, heartlessly, in cold blood, inexorably, inhumanely, inhumanly, meanly,… …

    New thesaurus

  • 116inhuman — ► ADJECTIVE 1) lacking positive human qualities; cruel and barbaric. 2) not human in nature or character. DERIVATIVES inhumanly adverb …

    English terms dictionary

  • 117monster — ► NOUN 1) a large, ugly, and frightening imaginary creature. 2) an inhumanly cruel or wicked person. 3) (before another noun ) informal extraordinarily large. ORIGIN Latin monstrum divine portent or warning, monster , from monere warn …

    English terms dictionary

  • 118devil, you —    ‘Devil’ is seldom used vocatively in modern times to refer to a person who is considered to be truly fiendish, inhumanly cruel, or wicked. Such usage is found in Shakespeare, as when Albany says to Goneril in King Lear (4:ii), ‘See thyself,… …

    A dictionary of epithets and terms of address

  • 119fiend — [fēnd] n. [ME fend, feend < OE feond, lit., the one hating, orig. prp. < base of feogan, to hate, akin to Goth fijands < fijan, to hate < IE base * pē(i) , to harm] 1. an evil spirit; devil 2. an inhumanly wicked or cruel person ☆ 3.… …

    English World dictionary

  • 120fiendish — [fēn′dish] adj. 1. of or like a fiend; devilish; inhumanly wicked or cruel 2. extremely vexatious or difficult fiendishly adv. fiendishness n …

    English World dictionary