rosily









rosily


rosily [roh-zuh-lee] ExamplesWord Origin adverb

  1. with a rosy color.
  2. in a rosy manner; brightly, cheerfully, or optimistically.

Origin of rosily First recorded in 1800–10; rosy + -ly Examples from the Web for rosily Contemporary Examples of rosily

  • It offers a rosily revisionist view of his career as a fiercely partisan Richard Nixon defender during the Watergate scandal.

    ‘41’ Review: HBO’s Bland Documentary Valentine to George H.W. Bush

    Lloyd Grove

    June 11, 2012

  • Historical Examples of rosily

  • Louise, rosily alive, and quivering with eagerness, was waiting for her comments.

    Regiment of Women

    Clemence Dane

  • The sun that had just risen was shining in rosily through the soft clouds of the sky.

    Three Soldiers

    John Dos Passos

  • Marsala is rosily, downily carminative; gin pricks and refreshes while it warms.

    Crome Yellow

    Aldous Huxley

  • He was rosily awake again by the time the newsboys were crying their evening papers.

    Harper’s Young People, August 31, 1880

    Various

  • I have known likings to be colored as rosily as love, and seen what called itself love as cold as the chilliest liking.

    The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 5, No. 28, February, 1860

    Various

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