Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adverb in a
euphonic manner
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Quoted in Jameson, where the lines are treated for their lyric reification of the sea voyage, but without attention to the phonetic wavelets that serves to swamp the turmoil of below-deck labor — or at least float euphonically above it. close window
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Maddy is now a euphonically correct - but dubious Tiana (I don't know, people, sounds just like tiara...), and said Tiana has returned to the ranks of the idle Disney rich as a non-chambermaid; The Frog Princess, so as not to potentially offend anyone French (!) is now called The Princess & the Frog, and we all will live happily ever after in liberty, equality and fraternity.
Archive 2007-05-01 tanita davis 2007
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Maddy is now a euphonically correct - but dubious Tiana (I don't know, people, sounds just like tiara...), and said Tiana has returned to the ranks of the idle Disney rich as a non-chambermaid; The Frog Princess, so as not to potentially offend anyone French (!) is now called The Princess & the Frog, and we all will live happily ever after in liberty, equality and fraternity.
The WritingYA Weblog: Princess Phooey tanita davis 2007
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Sol also likes the near-elderly because the two ly endings in the nearly elderly fall discordantly on the ear: “The grammatically and euphonically suitable phrase is the near-elderly, not the nearly elderly.”
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
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Sol also likes the near-elderly because the two ly endings in the nearly elderly fall discordantly on the ear: “The grammatically and euphonically suitable phrase is the near-elderly, not the nearly elderly.”
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
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Sol also likes the near-elderly because the two ly endings in the nearly elderly fall discordantly on the ear: “The grammatically and euphonically suitable phrase is the near-elderly, not the nearly elderly.”
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
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Sol also likes the near-elderly because the two ly endings in the nearly elderly fall discordantly on the ear: “The grammatically and euphonically suitable phrase is the near-elderly, not the nearly elderly.”
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
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The proper spelling would then be _simcerus_, and euphonically _sincerus_: thus we have _sim-plex_, which does not mean without a fold, but (_semel plico_, [Greek: plekô]) once folded.
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He won the Wanamaker Mile - even that name comes tumbling out fast and euphonically - seven times, earning himself the nickname the Chairman of the Boards, for the steeped wooden oval track that circled cacophonous Madison Square Garden, where officials in tuxedos clicked their stopwatches.
NYT > Home Page By GEORGE VECSEY 2012
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■ Because as I enjoy my snack, I can take a few minutes - or hours - and wander about the market, a remarkable place filled with kiosks, restaurants, stalls and vendors selling fresh fruits, vegetables, spices and nuts, the air thick with the smells of all these goods, euphonically blended with the sights, sounds and energy of a city coming alive.
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