Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- Avowedly; openly; explicitly.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adverb Avowedly; explicitly.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adverb With a formal
declaration ;avowedly ,explicitly ,professedly
Etymologies
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Examples
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Nevertheless, some declaredly feminist women artists were also active in the country.
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This was wondered at, as my uncle has introduced him into our family declaredly as a visitor to my sister.
Clarissa Harlowe 2006
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Had not her uncle brought him declaredly as a suitor to her? —
Clarissa Harlowe 2006
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The very fact of the elegies 'Modernist aesthetic and declaredly critical-Romantic lineage, which for Brecht seems indissolubly linked to the poems' unblinking view of commitment's unexpected paths in art and life, would appear substantially to reconfigure recent periodizations and style-characterizations of post-Modernism and its much maligned antecedent.
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That end is declaredly within the vista of these operations, within their initial design.
Anticipations Of the Reaction of Mechanical and Scientific Progress upon Human life and Thought 1906
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Some of these bodies are declaredly dissentient, some claim to be integral portions of the
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To this terrible, irrepressible yearning, (surely more or less down underneath in most human souls) this universal democratic comradeshipthis old, eternal, yet ever-new interchange of adhesiveness, so fitly emblematic of AmericaI have given in that book, undisguisedly, declaredly, the openest expression.
Preface, 1876, To the Two-Volume Centennial Edition of L. of G. and Two Rivulets. Collect 1892
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Remember, too, that Whitman declaredly writes the lyrics of America, of the masses, of democracy, and of the practical labor of mechanics, boatmen, and farmers: --
Birds and Poets : with Other Papers John Burroughs 1879
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Its evil day must come at last; but let it come declaredly and openly, and let no dishonouring and false substitute deprive it of the funeral offices of memory.
Selections From the Works of John Ruskin John Ruskin 1859
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I do assure you, my friend, it is my candid opinion, that London is the Babylon alluded to in the 17th and 18th chapters of the Revelations of St. John the Divine; and I am positively and declaredly the character that is set forth in the 19th chapter, and the three first verses of the 20th chapter of the same book.
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