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Webster 1913 Edition


Sovereignly

Sov′er-eign-ly

,
adv.
In a sovereign manner; in the highest degree; supremely.
Chaucer.

Webster 1828 Edition


Sovereignly

SOVEREIGNLY

,
adv.
suv'eranly. Supreme power; supremacy; the possession power. Absolute sovereignty belongs to God only.

Definition 2024


sovereignly

sovereignly

English

Adverb

sovereignly (comparative more sovereignly, superlative most sovereignly)

  1. (archaic) To the highest degree; wholly; utterly
    • 1909, William James, A Pluralistic Universe:
      They are sovereignly unjust, for all the parties are human beings with the same essential interests, and no one of them is the wholly perverse demon which another often imagines him to be.
    • 1897, Anne E. Keeling, Great Britain and Her Queen:
      There is something almost magical at first sight in the transformation which the Australian colonies have undergone in a very limited space of time; yet it is but the natural result of the untrammelled energy of a race sovereignly fitted to "subdue the earth."
    • 1897, George Meredith, One of Our Conquerors, Complete:
      Yet here was this girl, who called him up to the heights of young life again: and a brave girl; and she bled for the weak, had no shrinking from the women underfoot: for the reason, that she was a girl sovereignly pure, angelically tender.
    • 1880, Frances Ann Kemble, Records of a Girlhood:
      All his glorious plays would not be worth (bookseller's value) some scraps of thought and feeling, or mere personal detail, or even commonplace (he must have been sovereignly commonplace) impartment of theatrical business news and gossip to his fellow-players, or Scotch Drummond, or my Lord Southampton, or the Dark Woman of the sonnets.
    • 1862, Count Agr de Gasparin, The Uprising of a Great People:
      To speak truly, it has but one declaration to make: to proclaim anew the constitutional law, by virtue of which each State sovereignly decides its own affairs, and consequently excludes all interference of Congress in the matter of slavery.
    • 1623, William Shakespeare, The Winter's Tale:
      CAMILLO. Sir, my lord, I could do this; and that with no rash potion, But with a ling'ring dram, that should not work Maliciously like poison: but I cannot Believe this crack to be in my dread mistress, So sovereignly being honourable.

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