Roundly in a sentence as an adverb

I think he roundly missed the point. Yes you scan over the screen and it might be hard to find the things you want on day one.

He has roundly ruined HK for future whistleblowers though!

The 4 Hour Body is roundly and deservedly mocked on bodybuilding forums. Its claims are completely delusional.

And they flooded users with notifications of every incremental change, and were roundly mocked for that too. It is impossible to satisfy everyone all the time.

I don't think this is a sexism issue at all -- look at how roundly Alexey Vayner was mocked. While I don't think the TechCrunch article was an example of charitable judgment, people are bloodthirsty and love to string up an "example case" every so often.

Jobs especially was roundly criticized for his public stance on this, but in the end, he was proved right: Adobe never could get Flash working properly on a low-powered device.

He describes his almost pathetic attempts to find a finance job, only to be roundly rejected by every firm to which he applied. He then enrolled in the London School of Economics to gain a Master's degree in economics.

She collected many responses from biased lists with voluntary response and drew conclusions that are roundly contradicted by all responsible studies. She claimed to be doing only qualitative work, but what she got was just plain garbage.

They've made a huge number of excellent strategic decisions that were roundly criticized by investors and business analysts when they were first announced.

At the time this was roundly criticised in the media as a grave strategic error, in some circles it still is, but that was to completely misunderstand Apple's strategy.

Heh, I recall another incident where I roundly ignored an attractive woman at an entrepreneurship meeting, only to find she was a CEO and one of the panel speakers.

I appreciate that there's a persistent media myth that H1B is about getting "top" engineers, but this has been thoroughly, totally debunked and should be roundly mocked whenever it shows up.

Add in the anti-democratic aspects and it's clear to me that modern "free trade" agreements, negotiated in secret between the Aspen corporate elite, are something that should be roundly opposed.

When the media feels in any way uncomfortable roundly criticizing the government? When the media feels too uncomfortable to openly publish government secrets which were previously leaked?

> When the media feels in any way uncomfortable roundly criticizing the government? There's a sliding scale here that is incredibly hard to judge, because a lot of the time the media is "uncomfortable" criticising the government because they care about access, or because they don't think their audience or their advertisers will want to read/hear/watch it.

But I'm sure if I highlighted some of the things that I do I would be roundly criticized and downvoted on HN for, in the opinion of the group, taking advantage of people, developers, programmers who expect perhaps that everyone dedicates countless hours to helping others for the good of society. One example might be anytime I attempt to highlight how I've sold or help sell domain names for people.

Roundly definitions

adverb

in a round manner; "she was roundly slim"

adverb

in a blunt direct manner; "he spoke bluntly"; "he stated his opinion flat-out"; "he was criticized roundly"

See also: bluffly bluntly brusquely