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Definition of Glowingly
1. Adverb. In an enthusiastically glowing manner. "In her letter she praised him glowingly"
Definition of Glowingly
1. adv. In a glowing manner; with ardent heat or passion.
Definition of Glowingly
1. Adverb. In the manner of something that is glowing. ¹
2. Adverb. In a glowing way. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Glowingly
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Glowingly
Literary usage of Glowingly
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Diary of John Evelyn by John Evelyn, Austin Dobson (1906)
"I dined at Sir Stephen Fox's :l after dinner came a fellow who eat live charcoal,
glowingly ignited, quenching them in his mouth, and then champing and ..."
2. Godolphin ; and Falkland by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (1842)
"... upon that difference between the town life and the country, on which the
brothers of the minstrel craft have, in all ages, so glowingly insisted. ..."
3. The Aztec Treasure-house: A Romance of Contemporaneous Antiquity by Thomas Allibone Janvier (1899)
"In a word, I presented the case most glowingly—so glowingly, in fact, that my
own heart was quite fired by it—and ended by urging them earnestly to join us ..."
4. Nostrums and Quackery: Articles on the Nostrum Evil and Quackery Reprinted by American Medical Association, Arthur Joseph Cramp (1921)
"Many of these quack remedies so glowingly set forth in the public prints, possess
the power of suppressing the attack for a time, but it is suppression only ..."
5. Our Standard-bearer: Or, the Life of General Ulysses S. Grant by Oliver Optic (1868)
"... accompanies the illustrious Soldier to Mexico, and glowingly dilates upon the
gallant Achievements of our Arms from Palo Alto to Monterey 56 CHAPTER VI. ..."
6. With Walt Whitman in Camden by Horace Traubel (1908)
"I said to W.: " I have never known you to speak of any woman as glowingly as you
do of Fanny Wright." He answered quickly: "I never felt so glowingly ..."
7. The Century Dictionary: An Encyclopedic Lexicon of the English Language by William Dwight Whitney (1889)
"(He would grow too rank else), a small eclipse to shadow A little stoop there
may be to allay him him; But out he must break glowingly again. ..."