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Definition of Nakedly
1. Adverb. In an exposed manner; without protection or defense. "They were attacked as they huddled nakedly on the bare hill"
2. Adverb. Without clothing. "Henriette saw the weaving figure of an Apache warrior reel nakedly on a pony and rush by with a rifle raised"
Definition of Nakedly
1. adv. In a naked manner; without covering or disguise; manifestly; simply; barely.
Definition of Nakedly
1. Adverb. in a naked manner; without concealing anything; blatantly or openly ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Nakedly
1. naked [adv] - See also: naked
Lexicographical Neighbors of Nakedly
Literary usage of Nakedly
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Court of King's Bench: With by Great Britain Court of King's Bench, George Mifflin Wharton (1845)
"... that the Court would have no difficulty in dealing with that naked proposition
whenever it should be brought nakedly before them. ..."
2. Moral Disquisitions: And Strictures on the Rev. David Tappan's Letters to by Samuel Spring (1815)
"Without a Saviour therefore, you must stand nakedly exposed to all the vengeance
of the divine law, which requires perfect obedience, upon the penalty of ..."
3. The True Intellectual System of the Universe: Wherein All the Reason and by Ralph Cudworth, Thomas Birch (1837)
"Which, indeed, was one reason, that the rather induced us nakedly to reveal all
the mysteries of Atheism, because we observed, that so long as these things ..."
4. The True Intellectual System of the Universe: Wherein All the Reason and by Ralph Cudworth, Johann Lorenz Mosheim (1845)
"Which indeed was one reason that the rather induced us nakedly to reveal all the
mysteries of atheism, because we observed, that so long as things are ..."
5. Memoirs of the Archbishops of Dublin by John D'Alton (1838)
"... insomuch that, though many things he says were true, yet he has hardly spoke
a true word that is told truly and nakedly without a warp. ..."
6. The Plenary Inspiration of the Scriptures Asserted, and the Principles of by Samuel Noble (1825)
"... to be those which, in the Divine Word, every where belong to these symbols:
but, for the reason stated above, we leave them, thus nakedly propounded, ..."