belongingly
English
Etymology
belonging + -ly
Adverb
belongingly (comparative more belongingly, superlative most belongingly)
- In a manner characteristic of belonging.
- 1961, John Berry, Flight of White Crows: Stories, Tales, and Paradoxes, Macmillan (1961), page 183:
- To the man who stands belongingly in this continuum, no event that may be predicated of him is inappropriate.
- 1970, Murray N. Rothbard, Power & Market: Government and the Economy, Ludwig von Mises Institute (2006), →ISBN, page 272:
- For there is nothing, in a free society, to prevent those who wish from going off in separate communities and living primitively and “belongingly.”
- 2010, John Barnshaw, White's Corner, Matador (2010), →ISBN, page 243:
- "And not over yet" he said, putting his arm around her waist as they strolled back to the car, which brought Bob back to her mind. His arm had been there belongingly thousands of times.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:belongingly.
- 1961, John Berry, Flight of White Crows: Stories, Tales, and Paradoxes, Macmillan (1961), page 183: