consolatorily

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English

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Etymology

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From consolatory +‎ -ly.

Adverb

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consolatorily (comparative more consolatorily, superlative most consolatorily)

  1. In a consolatory manner.
    • 1836, Walter Savage Landor, Pericles and Aspasia[1], volume 1, London: Saunders and Otley, page 167:
      It required an effort to be perfectly composed, at a simily which I imagine has never been used in the Greek language since the days of Medea; but I cast down my eyes, and said consolatorily, “It is difficult to do justice to such men as Pericles and Polus.”
    • 2004, Veronica Buckley, Christina, Queen of Sweden, London: Fourth Estate, Part 1, “The Little Queen,” pp. 39-40,[2]
      Of the younger Oxenstierna brother, Gabriel Gustavsson, now High Steward, she writes that he was well liked and well spoken, but in the natural way of the Swedes, without the burden of much erudition, since he had “only a smattering of Latin.” But he was, she adds consolatorily, “a very good man.”

Synonyms

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