We have no meanings for "inordinately vain" in our records yet.
1 He was inordinately vain , and died at last insane and a suicide.
2 He was an inordinately vain man, but he was an exceedingly shrewd one.
3 Had she not been inordinately vain , this woman, like many, would have been extraordinarily clever.
4 She was well educated, and inordinately vain of her blood, and how this galling necessity humiliated her!
5 He was inordinately vain and cantankerous.
6 He was inordinately vain and self-centred.
7 Lord Tancred was not inordinately vain , though a man, and he had a sense of humor-sohe laughed.
8 He was an ill-conditioned fellow, inordinately vain of his personal appearance, and by no means scrupulous in his conduct with women.
9 Sir Herbert Street was an inordinately vain man, but conscientious at the same time and, in matters of art-criticism, sufficiently reliable.
10 She is inordinately vain of her hands, and says her husband married her for their sake, which I can quite believe.
11 For this man considered himself to be a genius, and was inordinately vain , and his ignorance was equal to his conceit.
12 It was the only trait she had inherited from that particular ancestor and he had been inordinately vain of his wife's hands.
13 A cat that has white mittens, for instance, is often inordinately vain , and keeps them in the most immaculate state of cleanliness.
14 It was too high for her, so her little feet, of which she was inordinately vain , rested on a hassock of crimson tapestry.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Inordinately vain through the time
Inordinately vain across language varieties