What does abusivement in French mean?

What is the meaning of the word abusivement in French? The article explains the full meaning, pronunciation along with bilingual examples and instructions on how to use abusivement in French.

The word abusivement in French means excessively, to excess, unfairly, incorrectly, wrongly, improperly. To learn more, please see the details below.

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Meaning of the word abusivement

excessively, to excess

adverbe (de façon exagérée)

(adverb: Describes a verb, adjective, adverb, or clause--for example, "come quickly," "very rare," "happening now," "fall down.")
Je crois qu'elle a abusivement bu ce soir.
I think she has drunk excessively this evening.

unfairly

adverbe (en outrepassant ses droits)

(adverb: Describes a verb, adjective, adverb, or clause--for example, "come quickly," "very rare," "happening now," "fall down.")
La famille du prisonnier dit qu'il est détenu abusivement.
The man's family say he is being unfairly detained.

incorrectly, wrongly, improperly

adverbe (par abus de langage)

(adverb: Describes a verb, adjective, adverb, or clause--for example, "come quickly," "very rare," "happening now," "fall down.")
Les Gallois sont parfois abusivement appelés des Anglais.
The Welsh are sometimes improperly (or: incorrectly) called English.

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French (le français) is a Romance language. Like Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish, it comes from popular Latin, once used in the Roman Empire. A French-speaking person or country can be called a "Francophone". French is the official language in 29 countries. French is the fourth most spoken native language in the European Union. French ranks third in the EU, after English and German, and is the second most widely taught language after English. The majority of the world's French-speaking population lives in Africa, with about 141 million Africans from 34 countries and territories who can speak French as a first or second language. French is the second most widely spoken language in Canada, after English, and both are official languages at the federal level. It is the first language of 9.5 million people or 29% and the second language of 2.07 million people or 6% of the entire population of Canada. In contrast to other continents, French has no popularity in Asia. Currently, no country in Asia recognizes French as an official language.