gentlemanlily

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From gentlemanly +‎ -ly.

Adverb[edit]

gentlemanlily (comparative more gentlemanlily, superlative most gentlemanlily)

  1. (rare) In a gentlemanly manner.
    • 1905–1924, Joseph Conrad, “Appendix B: The Old Story”, in Jeremy Hawthorn, editor, The Inheritors and The Nature of a Crime (The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Joseph Conrad), Cambridge University Press, published 2022, →ISBN, page 293:
      He put it very gentlemanlily and with restraint.
    • 1934–5, John Cowper Powys, The Dorset Year: The Diary of John Cowper Powys, June 1934-July 1935, The Powys Press, published 1998, →ISBN, page 178:
      So I got cigarettes & the Papers & had a nice talk with Mr French who was so well & gentlemanlily dressed!
    • 2004 spring, L. A. Nemrow, “John Rupert”, in Literary Imagination: The Review of the Association of Literary Scholars and Critics, volume 6, number 2, pages 163–170:
      And what was worse, the other man had made his point so subtly, even gentlemanlily, without a change of tone or a revealing expression;

Synonyms[edit]