Refine this word faster
Purely
"Purely" in a Sentence (25 examples)
Rows of houses, each of them different and pleasing with their spacious gardens, are replaced by purely functional blocks of flats which have nothing more to commend them than over-praised 'modern conveniences'.
I only found out about it purely by accident.
I wish to resign from my work for purely personal reasons.
Our meeting was purely accidental.
I said so purely in jest.
He met Sam purely by chance.
The first point that requires clarification is that the design was purely experimental.
I think it says something about human nature that the only form of life we have created so far is purely destructive.
In his essay "Esperanto: European or Asiatic language" Claude Piron has shown the similarities between Esperanto and Chinese, thereby putting to rest the notion that Esperanto is purely eurocentric.
Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Show 15 more sentences
I am fascinated by the entire scene, I purely am.
The IRA should "lead by example" and "unilaterally" abandon paramilitary violence and adopt a purely political strategy, a leading Sinn Féin MP urged yesterday.
"But this meal tonight is not a date, not in the traditional sense. It's purely platonic, I assure you."
faith and troth, / Strain'd purely from all hollow bias drawing: / Bids thee with most diuine integritie, / From heart of very heart, great Hector welcome.
By some means or other the water flows purely, and separated from the filth, in a deeper and narrower course on one side of the rock, and the refuse of the dirt and troubled water goes off on the other in a broader current [...].
My Dame (who was an utter ſtranger to all that had paſſed between the young Squire and her daughter) was exceeding glad to ſee him look ſo purely after his journey, and all the young fry ſwarmed about him, for the ſake of the halfpence they had ſo often ſcrambled for; […]
Land[lady]. Good-morrow to your worſhip!—I’m glad to ſee your worſhip look ſo purely—I came up with all ſpeed (taking breath) our pye is in the oven—that was what you ſent for me about, I take it. / Juſt[ice]. True—true—ſit down good Mrs. Buſtle, pray—— / Land. O your worſhip’s always very good (ſettling her apron) I came up juſt as I was, only threw my ſhawl over me—I thought your worſhip would excuſe—I’m quite as it were rejoiced to ſee your worſhip look ſo purely, and to find you up ſo hearty—
“I am no patient at all, ma’am, and have no patience either;—I am as well as you are, or my lady Dashfort either, and hope, God willing, long to continue so.” […] “Long, long, I hope, to continue so, if Heaven grants my daily and nightly prayers, and my lady Dashfort’s also. So, Mr. Reynolds, if the ladies’ prayers are of any avail, you ought to be purely, and I suppose ladies’ prayers have the precedency in efficacy.[…]”
On entering the cottage, she […] began to inquire after the health of the family. “They be all purely, thank ye, Miss,” said the woman; “and, as I tell my good man, I make no doubt but we shall do very well again, after a bit.”
PURELY, Quite well. “How’s thy mam?” “Purely thank ye.”
“Well, John, how are you; and how are Mary and the children?”—“All purely, thank ye, master.” “Why, you deceitful wretch—you ‘spiritless outcast’—you are worse than the knife-grinder! I know better; the friend of humanity has been with me. What do you mean by saying that your wife and children are well at home?[…]”
“Faith, yes, Mrs. Macane, it is: how are ye, Ma’am?” / “Purely, thank ye; only a little stiff, betimes, with them rheumatics—they make their way into the bones, Jakes, and stay there for their amusement, jist as Boneypart did in the heart of Spain.”
“[…] How do you do, Colonel Lambert. You find us late again, sir. Me and his Reverence kept it up pretty late with some of the young fellows, after the ladies went away. I hope the dear ladies are well, sir?” […] “The ladies are purely.[…]”
Purely [piw·u’li], adv.^([sic]) a term expressing a satisfactory state of health, and usual in response to an inquiry. Wh. Gl.; Mid. ‘Now, bairn, how are you?’ ‘Why, bairn, I am purely, thank you; and pray you, how’s yourself, and how goes all at home?’
PURELY, adv.^([sic]) n.Cy. Wm. Yks. Der. Lin. Rut. Nhp. Brks. Bdf. Hnt. e.An. Hmp. I.W. Wil. Som. [piu·ərli, piu·əli.] 1. Well in health. Cf. pure, 1. […] w.Yks.² She’s purely. […] Bdf. I’m purely (J.W.B.). Hnt. (T.P.F.) e.An.¹ I am purely to-day.
See also for "purely"
Next best steps
Mini challenge
Unscramble this word: purely