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charitably

[ UK /t‍ʃˈæɹɪtəbli/ ]
[ US /ˈtʃɛɹɪtəbɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a charitable manner
    she treated him charitably

How To Use charitably In A Sentence

  • It ill befits a priest to act uncharitably.
  • Or, we might more charitably dub them expressions of hope unchastened by the rod of experience.
  • Endgame's fundamental weakness, though, is its script, which could charitably be called serviceable, and which might more accurately be said to take fascinating, complex characters and situations and reduce them to plywood cut-outs. Double Feature: Hunger
  • I am not disposed to be nervous, for I have always conscientiously avoided tea and too much study, and I have lived in the open air, and always managed to secure eight hours of dreamless, honest sleep; but I was "discomposed," as some one charitably explained it that morning; and Mrs. Darcy's cap was the cause. My New Curate
  • I charitably overlooked the fact this cost slightly more than they'd given me.
  • Barby, I believe, has a good opinion of us, and charitably concludes that we mean right; but some other of our country friends would think I was far gone in uppishness if they knew that I never touch fish with a steel knife; and it wouldn't mend the matter much to tell them that the combination of flavours is disagreeable to me – it hardly suits the doctrine of liberty and equality that my palate should be so much nicer than theirs. Queechy
  • Simonian, ingenuous enough to believe in his own doctrine, charitably paired them off, designing, no doubt, to convert them into monks of his order. The Magic Skin
  • His three acres lay tilted skyward at the point where the rocks of the Honan mountains met what might charitably be called the arable fields. Hawaii
  • Still, he reflected charitably, it was hardly her fault.
  • Should a problem arise between two sisters, then `humbly and charitably "the abbess should correct the wrongdoer. RIDDLE ME THIS
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