¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Malodorously
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Malodorously
Literary usage of Malodorously
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Conversations with Carlyle by Charles Gavan Duffy (1892)
"... extensive carrion in the liveliest state of decomposition—most malodorously
pointing out to me the state of both the Downing Streets, yours and ours. ..."
2. People's Banks: A Record of Social and Economic Success by Henry William Wolff (1896)
"... which Commendatore Reduced- Luzzatti has denounced as " usurious," and which
made the bank smell very malodorously in the nostrils of well-meaning men. ..."
3. The Development of Embroidery in America by Candace Wheeler (1921)
"These unfortunate sisters, who were rather malodorously called decayed gentlewomen,
became eager and petted pupils of a new and popular organization called ..."
4. Gentlemen Errant: Being the Journeys and Adventures of Four Noblemen in by Nina Cust (1909)
"So he rose up swiftly and malodorously and fled into a near wood : ' left the
road, did as doeth the wolf that hath robbed a village,1 glanced often around ..."
5. Problems of Mysticism and Its Symbolism by Herbert Silberer (1917)
"... case it is worth remembering that out of dung and urine, things that decompose
malodorously and repulsively, fresh life arises. ..."