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charmingly

[ US /ˈtʃɑɹmɪŋɫi/ ]
[ UK /t‍ʃˈɑːmɪŋli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a charming manner

How To Use charmingly In A Sentence

  • True, Olbermann and Patrick would also make plenty of references to pop culture, but the references came across as charmingly haughty, as if the anchormen were showing us that they had interests that extended beyond the court or field. The Enthusiast
  • But a long way from endless fields of sunflowers and locals arguing charmingly about porcini. Times, Sunday Times
  • For me, his random interviews with various down-and-out characters in Cleveland, on sidewalks and in living rooms, while charmingly syncopated in the Jarmusch family style, with intermittent jazz music and grainy shaky filming, did not result in a clear "what is this about"--although Tom insisted that for him, it was exactly the Cleveland he wished to express, "meant to be an imperfect portrait. Karin Badt: The Thessaloniki Documentary Film Festival: From Soviet Cannibals to Jarmusch's Cleveland
  • The panel laughed over Mike Huckabee's Sunday touting of his poll numbers among Republicans, which Douthat termed characteristically "charmingly passive-aggressive. HuffPost TV: Sam Stein On 'Ed Show': Time For Birthers To 'Move On To The Real Issues' (VIDEO)
  • Elf is a charmingly daffy movie that feels like a leap back in time to more genuinely heart-warming Christmas fare.
  • Images includes those of vivid rehearsals as well as behind-the-scenes pictures of seminal company personalities such as Margot Fonteyn and Ninette de Valois, plus never-before-seen views of the dancers off duty, most charmingly a snap of Lynn Seymour and Rudolf Nureyev, drinking in a London pub. This week's new dance
  • ‘Ah - Miss Corel,’ he greeted her charmingly, ignoring the clangor of alarms and frantic shouts from outside.
  • The characters are unengaging, the actors never called upon to produce anything beyond pure ham (although they do it charmingly enough).
  • There's something charminglyold-fashioned about his brand of entertainment.
  • He is the type not of the charmingly nutty but of the exhaustingly garrulous professor.
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