Adjective : a litigious person. From Dictionary.com.
Has the whole goddamned country gone litigiously insane??!?. From Wordnik.com. [News Flash!] Reference
Some of Hollywood's litigiously-minded have taken to calling the deal "SueTube.". From Wordnik.com. [Boing Boing] Reference
He boasted that he stood up litigiously for the interests of the college; and he had undefined and undefinable ideas that the marshal intercepted a. From Wordnik.com. [Little Dorrit] Reference
Eventually things began to fragment, as major talents left, sometimes litigiously, and discarded lesser ones fell back into poverty or killed themselves. From Wordnik.com. [One Nation Under a Groove] Reference
I sometimes wish GUD didn't publish adult-leaning content so that we could more easily market to perspicacious YA -- but at least in puritanical-US, that would be litigiously dangerous. From Wordnik.com. [MIND MELD: If You Could Change Any Aspect of The Science Fiction Field, What Would it Be?] Reference
He had long been suspected as the real writer of the future president's Pulitzer Prize-winning "Profiles in Courage," an allegation Sorensen and the Kennedys emphatically – and litigiously – denied. From Wordnik.com. [Ted Sorensen DEAD: John F. Kennedy Speechwriter, Obama Supporter, Dies At 82] Reference
In any case, the fast-paced litigiously delightful play is one not to be missed. From Wordnik.com. [Black Entertainment : Black News : Urban News : Hip Hop News - EURweb.com] Reference
But Friday's revelation takes the Street View concerns in a different - and litigiously stickier direction. From Wordnik.com. [Christian Science Monitor | All Stories] Reference
While high-tech nations are refining their options eugenically and quibbling litigiously, the inhabitants of low-tech countries are just having babies. From Wordnik.com. [Recently on This Recording] Reference
Instead of expressing anxiety to receive his son, he litigiously requires proofs, and more proofs, when he has received every satisfactory proof already. From Wordnik.com. [Japhet in Search of a Father] Reference
Instead of expressing anxiety to receive his son, he litigiously requires proofs, and more proofs, when he has received every satisfactory proof, already. From Wordnik.com. [Japhet, in Search of a Father] Reference
Marin residents can be highly protective and even litigiously combative about one of the most valuable intangibles of home ownership: their views of the county's breathtaking beauty. From Wordnik.com. Reference
James Danzinger started the quest, which has had several abrupt turns, the most sinister of which AP claiming sole copyright over the image and trying to go after Fairey litigiously. From Wordnik.com. [Quality Peoples] Reference
GOP PLANNING LAWSUIT IN WEST VIRGINIA - Hotline On Call reports that West Virginia GOP officials are aiming to litigiously move up a special election to fill Robert Byrd's Senate seat. From Wordnik.com. [HUFFPOST HILL - JULY 6TH, 2010] Reference
Everywhere one finds an energetic, ambitious, short-sighted, common-place type in the seats of authority, blind to the new possibilities and litigiously reliant upon the traditions of the past. From Wordnik.com. [The World Set Free] Reference
• The winner of the 1999-2005 Tours, Lance Armstrong, never tested positive but a recently published book nonetheless claims he took performance enhancers (an allegation Armstrong vehemently and litigiously denies). From Wordnik.com. [Purpleocity.net] Reference
There was a clothing store directly opposite Amzi's bank, and his wandering eye could not have failed to observe the lettering on the windows of the office above it, which, in badly scratched gilt, published the name of Thomas Kirkwood, Attorney at Law, to the litigiously inclined. From Wordnik.com. [Otherwise Phyllis] Reference
Over the last several months, publishers have begun opposing the Google Print for Libraries program http://print.google.com and grumbling litigiously about copyright issues. From Wordnik.com. [Internet News: Scholarly Archives] Reference
O o o Walter P. Kinnard settled non-litigiously. From Wordnik.com. [American Tabloid]
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