rockily

Adverb

 * 1) In an uneven way; in a rocking manner.
 * 2) *
 * We arrive there five minutes later and I sit up very rockily. I have to get off this boat, I am getting sick.
 * 1) *
 * French actress Sophie Marceau entered rockily on heels
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 * The hand-held camera rockily zooms in on one of the surgeons who is holding a circular surgical saw covered in dried blood.
 * 1) In a manner suggestive of a rock or rocks.
 * 2) *
 * After the trail reaches the height of land, it descends sometimes steeply and often rockily.
 * 1) *
 * Patient, always humane and trustworthy, he is personally humble at the very time that he is rockily steadfast (an unsympathetic witness might say stubborn), not because he fails to understand and respect the views of others but because he refuses to compromise his own enduring values.
 * 1) Unsteadily; inconsistently or resulting in volatility.
 * 2) *
 * They would gain much in common only slowly, and I should add rockily, for the early stages of their acquaintance was based substantially on mutual self-interest.
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 * At 13 Drew was using cocaine, and by the time she was 16 the rockily-rehabbed actress was co-authoring an autobiography about it all.
 * 1) In a manner suggestive of rock music.
 * 2) *
 * The music of Richard Cocciante, the book and lyrics of Luc Plamondon, with the lyrics translated by Will Jennings, are consistently and rockily entertaining
 * 1) *
 * Top of the three here is “Ton Of Love”, a back beaten Tom Petty-ish album tracker with Beach Boy backing vox, slick and, get this, rockily abrasive.
 * The music of Richard Cocciante, the book and lyrics of Luc Plamondon, with the lyrics translated by Will Jennings, are consistently and rockily entertaining
 * 1) *
 * Top of the three here is “Ton Of Love”, a back beaten Tom Petty-ish album tracker with Beach Boy backing vox, slick and, get this, rockily abrasive.