¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inspiritingly
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inspiritingly
Literary usage of Inspiritingly
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Studies in Seven Arts by Arthur Symons (1906)
"... enthrallingly or inspiritingly in general, within that music; and, instead
thereof, was driven by the general necessity of his inner being to employ his ..."
2. Memoirs of the Court of England, from the Revolution in 1688 to the Death of by John Heneage Jesse (1846)
"... instantly took off his hat with his wounded arm, and waving it conspicuously
in the air, shouted inspiritingly to his men to follow him to the attack. ..."
3. The Lands of Scott by James Frothingham Hunnewell (1871)
"The final episode, however, inspiritingly expresses the result, when, amid
the "clattering ..."
4. Good Words by Norman Macleod (1879)
"However well preserved his tartans, and granting that they waved inspiritingly
in the breeze, Malise, with his lean shanks and his wrinkled, careworn face, ..."
5. The Mysteries of the Court of London by George William MacArthur Reynolds (1853)
"splendid band being in attendance, the alternate I mantling countenance of the
patrician young lady, quadrille and waltz soon sounded most inspiritingly ..."
6. Reginald Dalton by John Gibson Lockhart (1823)
"The good Priest, having said all this gravely but inspiritingly, began in a
softer, and yet a more solemn tone, to touch upon the situation of Ellen Hesketh ..."