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"meanly" Definitions
  1. in a way that is unkind
  2. (British English) in a way that is not generous
  3. (old-fashioned) looking poor
"meanly" Synonyms
modestly submissively meekly deferentially humbly abjectly lowly sheepishly hat in hand cap in hand abashedly self-consciously unassumingly respectfully diffidently poorly servilely ingloriously subserviently apologetically virulently villainously spitefully nastily malignantly maliciously malevolently hatefully despitefully cattily viciously wickedly immorally despicably contemptibly vilely cruelly callously dishonourably(UK) brutally meagerly miserly selfishly stingily parsimoniously frugally illiberally greedily ungenerously meagrely without exiguously paltrily penuriously avariciously acquisitively thriftily uncharitably tightly unjustly unjustifiably unlawfully wrongfully wrongly unfairly badly prejudicially reprehensibly sinfully inexcusably inadequately bad incorrectly unsatisfactorily erroneously deficiently wretchedly faultily imperfectly dreadfully appallingly atrociously awfully deplorably terribly dismally lamentably miserably fiercely ferociously mercilessly savagely remorselessly pitilessly ruthlessly heartlessly inhumanly murderously barbarically barbarously brutishly hardheartedly relentlessly squalidly shabbily dilapidatedly sordidly seedily sleazily sorrily dingily mangily scruffily scuzzily crummily grungily rattily mediocrely inferiorly limitedly averagely restrictedly basely meagerly(US) meagrely(UK) substandardly minorly littly slenderly sparsely lowlily ordinarily commonly plebeianly obscurely undistinguishedly ignobly lumpenly vulgarly excellently wonderfully greatly marvellously(UK) superbly fantastically finely awesomely terrifically fabulously stellarly splendidly sensationally grandly marvelously(US) superiorly neatly toppingly unsurpassedly primely expertly adeptly skilfully(UK) proficiently masterfully capably talentedly skillfully(US) giftedly polishedly savvily peerlessly keenly hotly medianly centrally intermediately medially mediumly normally standardly middlingly moderately More
"meanly" Antonyms
arrogantly audaciously boldly brashly brazenly contemptuously haughtily huffily imperiously loftily pompously presumptuously pretentiously pridefully proudly scornfully self-importantly superciliously swaggeringly uppishly benevolently benignantly good-heartedly kindheartedly kindly decently morally correctly fairly honestly justly rightly well satisfactorily acceptably adequately fine nicely palatably ably competently passably creditably sufficiently serviceably suitably tolerably convincingly okay properly alright gently humanely considerately agreeably caringly courteously thoughtfully amicably pleasantly kindlily compassionately cordially sensitively big-heartedly goodly congenially politely luxuriously elaborately fancily comfortably extravagantly grandly grandiosely indulgently lavishly lushly poshly impressively magnificently majestically plushly ritzily splendidly comfily hedonistically superiorly exceptionally excellently eminently extraordinarily finely highly outstandingly peerlessly perfectly stellarly sublimely flawlessly illustriously preeminently prestigiously primely remarkably sterlingly superly nobly aristocratically imperially queenlily genteelly greatly consequentially importantly significantly badly awfully dreadfully horribly abominably abysmally atrociously ineffectually poorly terribly appallingly awkwardly horrendously horridly lamentably lousily pathetically pitifully crummily deficiently incompetently ineptly amateurly amateurishly inferiorly inadequately mediocrely substandardly untalentedly inexpertly uselessly bunglingly inexperiencedly unqualifiedly unskillfully admirably commendably honourably(UK) ethically honorably(US) praiseworthily principledly respectably righteously exemplarily irreproachably laudably meritoriously scrupulously uprightly venerably virtuously generously altruistically beneficently charitably munificently openhandedly open-handedly philanthropically unselfishly bounteously bountifully freehandedly liberally unsparingly unstintingly maximumly

49 Sentences With "meanly"

How to use meanly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "meanly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "meanly". Mastering all the usages of "meanly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

So is there something about online social media culture that makes some people behave meanly?
So, gleefully and probably a little meanly, I asked my dad (a long-time resident of #BachelorNation, seriously!) what he thought.
They are also meanly furious that the ECB could help the struggling French, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese economies, representing one-half of the monetary union's GDP.
ItsyWatch, a "gamified smartwatch app" that uses cartoon characters to not-so-meanly encourage good habits (except, perhaps, the habit of constantly checking your watch mid-conversation).
And as Gawker's web traffic grew, it got into trouble when it seemed to be meanly punching down, exposing secrets about people who were not so obviously newsworthy.
The A8 has wood paneling options, but those also feel thin and are meanly distributed across the interior, evincing none of the luxury feel that such materials should evoke.
"A boy on her swim team had meanly told her that she shouldn't swim so hard and lift her arms up because everyone could see her underarm hair," she said.
" Taylor's book takes its title and inspiration from William Makepeace Thackeray's "The Book of Snobs" (1848), in which that Victorian novelist defined a snob as one "who meanly admires mean things.
I was surprised of how unappetizing the well-marbled slab of meat on my plate can became when the amount of green stuff it can be eaten with needs to be carefully meted out so meanly.
" A quarter-century later, as Lincoln prepared a bold stroke that helped define his own legacy — the Emancipation Proclamation — his annual message to Congress spoke of historical circumstances more grandly: "We shall nobly save, or meanly lose, the last best hope of earth.
Donaldson stands close to the plate and hunched, his hands bobbing meanly, and when he sees a pitch he likes, he uncorks himself so fast—straightening up, bat zooming through to a one-handed finish, heels spinning on the dirt—that he seems liable to rip every ligament in his body.
He imbues his characters with flaws — spite, self-doubt projected meanly outward, lazy thinking, jealousy and the soft desire to see your friends fail, or at least not to succeed before you do — but he tempers these with humanity and small moments of grace, true friendship and concern for others.
Today under federal law, the 98% of all U.S. firms that have less than 100 employees, that are responsible for over 50% of the private sector work force and 50% of the GDP and over 90% of the net new jobs are supposed to receive a meanly little 23% of all federal contracts.
They gave him, those eyes, the look of being always meanly at work on some extended, crafty and unbenign calculation.
Hongotoxin (HgTX) is an ion channel toxin, which blocks Shaker-type (Kv1) K+ channels. The toxin is derived from the venom of Centruroides limbatus, a Central American scorpion found meanly in Costa Rica, Honduras and Panama.
Bagg- Meanly (played by Paula Jacobs), and the Head Witch who banished Skirty Marm and Old Noshie - Mrs. Abercrombie (Jan Harvey). The show was called 'Belfry Witches' because the two witches lived in a church belfry. The show was axed due to poor ratings.
Each time, she honoured the request. Each time, Diarmuid was angry and asked her how she could repay him so meanly when he overlooked her ugliness the first night they met. On the third mention, woman and house disappeared and his beloved greyhound died.
Before dying, the chief reportedly said, "If it had been my fortune to take Sir William Berkeley prisoner, I would not have meanly exposed him as a show to my people." He was succeeded as Weroance first by Nectowance, then by Totopotomoi, and later by his daughter, Cockacoeske, Totopotomoi's wife.
Because she refused to cooperate, Mangalam, a fair mother, pays with her life. She is cruelly stabbed by Duraiswamy (M. N. Nambiar), a notable, who put himself up to spirit away the colossal fortune of his deceased brother. He acts so meanly in front of little Somu, (Mangalam's elder son), the terrorised child who memorises the face of Duraiswamy.
The director K. B. Nagabhushanam who had just lost his wife, the famous actress Pasupuleti Kannamba, paid her tribute at opening of this movie. There is a magnificent sequence of fight in the stick, the Silambam, moreover toward the end, the character of MGR, Murugan is meanly attacked from behind and gets hit on the head...
A satirical novel on a similar theme, which mentions Hadrian the Seventh in its bibliography, is Robert Player's Let's Talk of Graves, of Worms, of Epitaphs (1972). The Translation of Father Torturo (2005), a novel by Brendan Connell about a priest's ruthless ascent to the papacy, is dedicated to "Frederick William Serafino Austin Lewis Mary Rolfe, Baron Corvo", "for the design which I so meanly twisted".
The house began as a hunting lodge in the 11th century. John, Lord Lumley built a house on the site which was visited by Queen Elizabeth on 23 August 1591. Robert Cecil described this house as "fayre, well builte without and not meanly furnished within, but want of water is a greate inconvenience."Paul E. J. Hammer, 'Letters from Cecil to Hatton', Religion, Politics and Society in Sixteenth-Century England (Cambridge, 2003), pp. 232-3.
Watkins conceded that the book "had been grudgingly and meanly reviewed". The book "sold poorly and was soon forgotten". Macleod contracted to write a second book (due for September 1962, but postponed), called The Last Rung, on leading politicians who had failed to achieve prime ministerial office despite being widely expected to do so. He completed chapters on Austen Chamberlain, Lord Curzon and Lord Halifax, and planned to write a chapter about R. A. Butler.
A ruffle happens in the gang, and the police is pressured to encounter someone from the gang to put an end to the issue. Hussain suggests Ibrahim's name so that he can marry Razia. Razia is then sent to Mumbai to meet Boxie (Daniel Balaji), who at first looks at her meanly but later understands her willpower. He keeps her in his gang and trains her to kill Rowther and his gang.
But, whatever he may think, he is yet far from the accomplishments which he has endeavoured to purchase at so dear a rate. I have watched him in publick places. He sneaks in like a man that knows he is where he should not be; he is proud to catch the slightest salutation, and often claims it when it is not intended. Other men receive dignity from dress, but my booby looks always more meanly for his finery.
After finding Boyd's grave and exhuming the body, Billy is ambushed by a band of men who desecrate Boyd's remains and stab Billy's horse through the chest. Billy, with the help of a gypsy, nurses the horse back to riding condition. The last scene shows Billy alone and desolate, coming across a terribly beat up dog that approaches him for help. In marked contrast to his youthful bond with the wolf, he shoos the dog away angrily, meanly.
Each time, Diarmuid was angry and asked her how she could repay him so meanly when he overlooked her ugliness the first night they met. On the third mention of that which he had promised never to speak of, the Loathly Lady and the house disappeared, and his beloved greyhound died. Realizing that his ungratefulness has caused him to lose everything he valued, Diarmuid set out to find his lady. He used an enchanted ship to cross a stormy sea.
After the departure of Kelly and Ryan, Toby appears more excited with the arrival of the two twenty-somethings who are single like himself. He appears to see them as closer friends than they see him but neither of them treats him meanly either. He convinced both of them, along with Kevin and Darryl, to grow moustaches from "Movember", believing this was a bonding activity. He was disappointed when Pete shaved his moustache off after Erin found it off-putting.
The weekly Wednesday market failed in 1764 and traveller John Kirby described Bildeston as 'a town in a bottom, meanly built and the streets are dirty'. The manor house was demolished, following the death of Bartholomew Beale the last lord of the manor 40 years before. The Cooke family of Polstead ostensibly took over the rents and the profits of the fair, but took little interest in the village. The last fair was held in 1872, with just one stall.
The first schools in the “Münchweiler Tal” were established after the Reformation. The pastor was also the schoolteacher, holding classes at either the church or the rectory. The schoolteachers and schoolmasters are known from records beginning in 1580. They were paid very meanly from church coffers for their teaching at winter school (a school geared towards an agricultural community’s practical needs, held in the winter, when farm families had a bit more time to spare) from early November to late February.
Gideon Haigh once wrote that "for a time, Ray Bright was colloquially and rather meanly known for having made almost as many tours as he had played Tests." Bright was selected on a large number of Australian touring squads, including ones to New Zealand (1973–74, 1976–77, 1978, 1981–82 and 1985–86), England (1977, 1980 and 1981), the West Indies (1978–79), Pakistan (1979–80 and 1982–83), Sri Lanka (1980–81), Sharjah (1986) and India (1986–87).
Horseburgh, the widow of a seaman who had been a local magistrate, was widely believed within the community to be a witch. Academic Stuart Macdonald describes the stereotypical witch in Fife as a woman who was elderly and poor; one 18th-century publication described Layng as a "very poor woman who had married meanly" but although she was by no means wealthy, her husband was a tailor and the treasurer in Pittenweem. Likewise Horseburgh did not live in a state of poverty.
According to Thomas Elmham "He fervently followed the service of Venus as well as of Mars, as a young man might he burned with her torches, and other insolences accompanied the years of his untamed youth." Tito Livio Frulovisi in Vita Henrici Quinti also says, "he exercised meanly the feats of Venus and Mars and other pastimes of youth for so long as the king his father lived."D. Rundle, "The Unoriginality of Tito Livio Frulovisi's Vita Henrici Quinti", English Historical Review, cxxiii (2008), pp. 1109–1131.
Soren is the main protagonist; a male barn owl, (Tyto alba), leader of "The Band". Soren was born in the Kingdom of Tyto, where he lived with his father, Noctus, his mother, Marella, his older brother, Kludd, his younger sister, Eglantine, and the family's nest snake Mrs. Plithiver. He was snatched by patrols from St. Aegolius Academy for Orphaned Owls after Kludd meanly pushed him from the nest. He later escaped with his friend Gylfie and together the two met Twilight then Digger before journeying to the Great Ga'Hoole Tree.
On one side were eloquence and debating power, patriotism, and public virtue, Grattan, Plunket, and Bushe, Foster, Fitzgerald, Ponsonby, and Moore, a truly formidable combination. On the other side were the baser elements of in Parliament, the needy, the spendthrift, the meanly ambitious, operated upon by Castlereagh, with the whole resources of the British Empire at his command. The pensioners and placemen who voted against him at once lost their places and pensions, the military officer was refused promotion, the magistrate was turned off the bench. And while anti-Unionists were unsparingly punished, the Unionists got lavish rewards.
445 at the age of around 100. During the fifty-five years of his solitary life he was always the most meanly clad of all, thus punishing himself for his former seeming vanity in the world. In like manner, to atone for having used perfumes at court, he never changed the water in which he moistened the palm leaves of which he made mats, but only poured in fresh water upon it as it wasted, thus letting it become stenchy in the extreme. Even while engaged in manual labour he never relaxed in his application to prayer.
He was fond of travelling, was well versed in literature, wrote poetry, and some interesting notes on the lives of Becerra, Céspedes, and Velazquez. He painted the portrait of Calderón de la Barca, which was placed over the tomb of the poet in the church of San Salvador in Madrid. His conduct towards his patron, the Admiral of Castille, has left a greater stain on his memory than even his vanity. He forsook the admiral when he was banished, and meanly solicited his patronage when recalled: the repulse he received produced melancholy, and caused his death, which took place in Madrid.
Succeeding in 1814 to the whole of his father's property, estimated at £250,000, he developed into a confirmed miser, and the last thirty years of his life were solely employed in accumulating wealth. He lived in a large house, 5 Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, but it was so meanly furnished that for some time he had not a bed to lie on. His dress consisted of a blue swallow-tailed coat with gilt buttons, brown trousers, short gaiters, and shoes which were patched and generally down at the heels. He never allowed his clothes to be brushed, because, he said, it destroyed the nap.
Interior view The church is built on an eminence, a little eastward of the keep, as appears from the height of the bank or mount still remaining close to the church-yard. It comprises a chancel, nave, north and south aisles, and a tower at the west end. The last appendage was originally high; but the rain having been suffered to destroy the timbers of the roof, it fell down in 1729; and being meanly rebuilt, was lowered about , and only the second of three bells, which it contained, was put up again. The large bell, weighing 4 cwt.
Kent State University Press, 2002 He stocked some 30,000 volumes including imported titles in English and French language, and occasionally non-print items such as "sparkling white champaign wine."Morning Chronicle (NY), 12-16-1802 One of Caritat's contemporary admirers wrote in 1803: > I would place the bust of Caritat among those of the Sosii of Horace, and > the Centryphon of Quintillian. He was my only friend at New-York, when the > energies of my mind were depressed by the chilling prospect of poverty. His > talents, were not meanly cultivated by letters; he could tell a good book > from a bad one, which few modern librarians can do.
John Gerard's Herball or General Historie of Plantes of 1633 describes skirret thus: : Sisarum. Skirrets. The roots of the Skirret be moderately hot and moist; they be easily concocted; they nourish meanly, and yeeld a reasonable good iuice: but they are something windie, by reason whereof they also prouoke lust. They be eaten boiled, with vineger, salt, and a little oile, after the manner of a sallad, and oftentimes they be fried in oile and butter, and also dressed after other fashions, according to the skil of the cooke, and the taste of the eater... When boiled and served with butter, the roots form a dish, declared by the seventeenth-century agriculturist John Worlidge in 1682, to be "the sweetest, whitest, and most pleasant of roots".
David Crosby said many years later Morrison treated Joplin meanly at a party at the Calabasas, California, home of John Davidson while Davidson was out of town. She reportedly hit him over the head with a bottle of whiskey in retaliation during a fight in front of witnesses. Thereafter, whenever Joplin had a conversation with someone who mentioned Morrison, Joplin referred to him as "that asshole," never by his first or last name.legitimate source with music business publicist Danny Fields' statement on Janis Joplin's opinion of Jim Morrison First written about in No One Here Gets Out Alive, Break On Through, and later in her own memoir, Strange Days: My Life with and without Jim Morrison, Morrison participated in a Celtic Pagan handfasting ceremony with rock critic Patricia Kennealy.
On the following day, Morton was expelled from the university, ostensibly for excessive absences and for general inattention to his duties as a student. His expulsion prompted protests from the student body and across the state. He was readmitted after signing a very conditional document, stating that if the charges against him had been true, then his expulsion would have been justified. The readmission did not last: the university's president, Henry Philip Tappan, released a version of his statement from which the conditionals had been removed, making it a straightforward admission of fault; Morton wrote a letter to the Detroit Free Press in which he retracted his original statement, declaring that he had not "...meanly petitioned, implored and besought the Faculty for mercy, for... the Latin-scratched integument of a dead sheep".
While the whole eventually came together as a Palladian composition centred on the portico it was, in fact, a conglomerate mess of uncomfortable rooms, meanly lit and with a plan which depended almost entirely on going outside in the cruel winters of the Yass plains. Except for the handsome stables block, thought to be designed by the Goulburn architect James Sinclair, nothing Hume built could be described as fine. With the exception of the kitchen block, it is hard to know what these rooms were used for; storage and perhaps strangers' rooms for putting up guests and of course rooms for employees. Hume and his wife were childless and presumably made use of the original O'Brien rooms with their pretty north-facing verandah and elegant French casements, almost like bookcase doors, opening onto it.
In one newspaper article to advertise their meeting, Mendoza taunted, "Mr. Humphreys is afraid, he dares not meet me as a boxer … though he has the advantages of strength and age, though a teacher of the art, he meanly shrinks from a public trial of that skill". Humphries replied Mendoza should make the same claim in the ring, and vowed to meet him.Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man", Department of Jewish Studies, McGill University, Montreal, July 2011, pg. 7 Third fight: Won on foul, round 65, Mendoza on left, 6 May 1789 In his third bout against Humphries on 6 May 1789 in Stelton, Hastingdonshire, Mendoza dominated and won on a foul in the 65th round when Humphries was believed to have dropped to the ground without being hit.
Burrows and Wallace, p.447 Ironically, it was the landowners like Moore, who fought the grid most insistently, who made the most money from exploiting it. Edith Wharton bemoaned "...rectangular New York ... this cramped horizontal gridiron of a town without towers, porticoes, fountains or perspectives, hide-bound in its deadly uniformity of mean ugliness," while her friend Henry James wrote that: > New York pays the penalty of her primal topographic curse, her old > inconceivably bourgeois scheme of composition and distribution, the > uncollected labor of minds with no imagination of the future and blind > before the opportunity given them by their two magnificent water-fronts. > This original sin of the longitudinal avenues perpetually, yet meanly > intersected, and of the organized sacrifice of the indicated alternative, > the great perspectives from East to West, might still have earned > forgiveness by some occasional departure from its pettifogging consistency.
A studio follow-up with the working title North was planned and recording began at Lees's Friarmere Studios, but after only a few days the project was shelved because Lees felt that due to a number of factors, the timing was not right to do justice to a new album. A new CD of the Black Box sessions with previously unreleased material (including a brand new demo) was released in February 2004 as Black Box Recovered, and a new studio set, One Drop in a Dry World, followed in May 2004. A short UK tour was planned to promote the CD, but in the event only one concert, at London's Mean Fiddler, went ahead, on 12 May. The live set, including rarely heard BJH classics as well as Mæstoso material, was captured for posterity and released on a limited, warts and all live CD, Fiddling Meanly, released in February 2005.
Smith, p. 48. The failure of the Bill led to the fall of the Ministry and the appointment of Pitt as Prime Minister, with Fitzwilliam finding himself in opposition. On 27 December Fitzwilliam wrote to Dr Henry Zouch against parliamentary reform and that the cause of the present discontents was: > ...not the corruption, not the lack of independence, not the want of > patriotism in the House of Commons, but the unwise and desperate exercise of > the royal prerogative to choose its own Ministers, by the dismission of > those who have the confidence of the people, and the appointment of those > who have it not. ...[Pitt was] a young man whose ambition is so restless, > and boundless, that nothing will satisfy him but being first: while to gain > the object of his passion, he cares little by what road he reaches it, and > meanly submits to creep up the backstairs of secret influence.
The third movement is a gentle song for soprano, and sets a fragment of John Milton's poem "On the Morning of Christ's Nativity": > :It was the winter wild, :While the Heaven-born child, ::All meanly wrapt in > the rude manger lies; :Nature in awe to him :Had doffed her gaudy trim, > ::With her great Master so to sympathise: :And waving wide her myrtle wand, > :She strikes a universal peace through sea and land. :No war or battle's > sound :Was heard the world around, ::The idle spear and shield were high up > hung; :The hooked chariot stood :Unstained with hostile blood, ::The trumpet > spake not to the armed throng, :And Kings sate still with aweful eye, :As if > they surely knew their sovran Lord was by. :But peaceful was the night > :Wherein the Prince of light ::His reign of peace upon the earth began: :The > winds, with wonder whist, :Smoothly the waters kissed, ::Whispering new joys > to the mild ocean, :Who now hath quite forgot to rave, :While birds of calm > sit brooding on the charmèd wave. The women of the chorus join the soloist for portions of the last verse.

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