condescendingly
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From condescending + -ly.
Pronunciation
[edit]Adverb
[edit]condescendingly (comparative more condescendingly, superlative most condescendingly)
- In a condescending manner.
- 1872, “The Toy Frigate. A Yarn picked up in the Model Dockyard.”, in Terrible Tales, page 91:
- […]; and as there was some perilous probability, in the event of the Colonel and Coloneless saying ‘no,’ of the Captain’s proposing to Miss De Fudgeville, orphan daughter and heiress of the late Rear-Admiral De Fudgeville, who, though she was as ugly as sin, and had something the matter with her spine, had a fortune of ninety thousand pounds, the gallant Colonel, late of the Heavies, and his wife, condescendingly agreed to accept Algernon as their son-in-law.
- 1974, John Boorman, Zardoz, London: Pan Books, page 10:
- He wore his strange and colourful clothes as if for inspection by a lesser being: condescendingly, casually.
- 1994, Jim Ranie, Jargodin: The Moonlighter, Brisbane: Jim Ranie, page 83:
- "What seems to be the trouble my child? Ah, the pains of youth," he nodded condescendingly.
Translations
[edit]In a condescending manner
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