Nastily in a sentence as an adverb

That won't be the first time, nor the last time they get nastily toned messages. They could have handled it a lot better.

It isn't meant nastily BTW, more of a conversation!

Rather than replying nastily maybe they should just leave the Eternal September that SO has become.

But it's a nastily high mountain to climb in terms of bootstrapping your interstellar empire.

But then the next question is, why does the geek tribe pick on the hipster tribe as nastily as it does? I don't see the same amount of _personal_ hatred against bankers, or people who do sports to the extreme.

Please don't post comments to HN that dismiss new work so nastily. There are many ways of suggesting improvements that don't involve trampling all over someone's freshly planted garden.

I moderated you up assuming you were about to provide a better way to perform the task then nastily calling an external command to do it. I should have read your post fully first.

I was bit quite nastily by the lack of garbage collection in Perl just a couple of months into using it. However, perl proved itself as an invaluable tool for quickly trying out ideas, and I was loyal to it for at least 10 years.

> Automatic destructor calls on leaving scope is the nicest part of c++ - shame it interacts with exceptions so nastily that nobody understands how it works." Exception safe code" yeah, right, not in c++.

Automatic destructor calls on leaving scope is the nicest part of c++ - shame it interacts with exceptions so nastily that nobody understands how it works." Exception safe code" yeah, right, not in c++.

More nastily, it leads to the actually competent people of that group being forced to "prove" themselves. Additionally, it leads to increased failure rates of people who get into the program / position.

With JS enabled, far too many websites end up breaking nastily some time down the line when they go to update something and fail. Again: not an intrinsic, but something far too many websites do anyways.

What could possibly do more to convince people that they should engage in the process of government than to be nastily judgmental of their reasons for not so doing heretofore?

Studying something you're not really interested in is nastily similar to finishing the last fiddly bits of a web site before getting paid. Leaving now is a potential waste of a great opportunity.

Practically, of course, implementing these ideas could be very nastily done and make no one happy but certain privileged people who attempt to squash competition.

There are things that can now only be done through the web interface, like finer grained control over permissions for shared vaults, and some of those are also nastily locked away behind more expensive subscriptions. I think everything should be manageable through the application, without ever visiting the site.

The comments you perceive to be nastily and unjustly bringing down ESR are presumably being made by people who do not agree with you about the value of his intellectual contributions. In fact, those comments are directly rebutting his best-known intellectual contribution.

You're rather nastily assuming that people who currently hold low-level jobs should hold those jobs, for their entire careers, and that therefore, any education unnecessary for their menial jobs is unnecessary for them as human beings. That's one small step for illogic, one giant leap for inhumanity to other people.

HN political discussion results in: * Commenters arguing nastily with each other about how much more authentically they agree with a position they both hold * Commenters that have had fascinating and productive discussions about technology or entrepreneurship or science reduced to slander and personal insults * Threads dominated almost entirely by tired cliches that a sophisticated markov commenter could generate just as effectively; these are HN's equivalent of "First Post! 1!

Nastily definitions

adverb

in a nasty ill-tempered manner; "`Don't expect me to help you,' he added nastily"

See also: meanly