Mischievously in a sentence as an adverb

Or more, over the internet, if he'd mischievously tagged 'shipping and handling' to the price.

I collect those stickers and intend to use them mischievously. Chromebook?

Like serving up javascript which behaves mischievously. It doesn't seem to matter to these people if the site owners were victims of bad and lazy designers.

You're a bastard - in the strict sense - which is uncommonly used nowadays, other than mischievously - if born out of wedlock. Being brought up by a single parent is a separate matter.

You've mischievously added a capital letter there as if the whole thing is a proper name when the article didn't do that. It's just called 'a unit of alcohol' which isn't as silly as you're pretending.'

People largely prefer the safe response of logic and understanding, even when I mischievously have presented them with nothing of the sort. The AI responds with chaos and creativity.

The ad merely used a boy as the lead character, and no, mischievously pressing a button on the girl's keyboard does not constitute "teasing girls' computer skills".

I could, however, take a non-English speaker and mischievously teach them that "banana" refers to what you and I would use the term "apple" to mean. No intrinsic relation exists between the signifier and the concept.

Quite mischievously too if I might add. And so far as schools being shut for not complying with some "arbitrary clause", it is actually more about private schools refusing to fulfil 25% reservation for children from socially backward communities.

You grin mischievously; it is a small sacrifice the consumerist Americans must pay for your country's increasing economic power. You know because of your pegged currency, they have no choice but to buy everything you produce.

The idea of a cosmic supervillain mischievously arranging nebulae around eternal black holes is amusing. Isolated black holes are trickier, especially as masses go up.

The full quote: > Thus on the rare occasions these adjectives are actually deployed accurately on TV, my husband and I will interject mischievously, “He means fewer water” or “She means less bottles.”

I find the hacker mischievously hilarious : "The question remains why Trump was using such a weak and simple password. Gevers has a possible explanation: ‘Trump is over 70 – elderly people often switch off two-step verification because they find it too complicated."

I mischievously wonder if it should be initially released in a source form that requires a lot of work to get it running. That way you skew things away from casual users who aren't going to get much out of it, and towards enthusiasts who will be congratulating themselves for building it or finding some weird RPM of it on BitTorrent.

The block quote from the book states, "Toward the end of my interview with him, [Murray] Campbell somewhat mischievously referred to an incident that had occurred toward the end of the first game in their 1997 match with Kasparov." This suggests rather strongly that the author of the book interviewed Campbell, rather than relying on some secondary source.

Anonymity clearly changes how individuals communicate, but the research I know of tends to focus more on how people like to behave badly and mischievously when there is no known reputation or name associated with the consequences of a action. Anyone who has spent any time on the internet knows the ability to obscure identity, however thin or unsophisticated, elicits changes in behavior.

Mischievously definitions

adverb

in a disobedient or naughty way; "he behaved badly in school"; "he mischievously looked for a chance to embarrass his sister"; "behaved naughtily when they had guests and was sent to his room"

See also: badly naughtily