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touchingly

[ UK /tˈʌt‍ʃɪŋli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a poignant or touching manner
    she spoke poignantly

How To Use touchingly In A Sentence

  • Their halting conversations and touchingly described moments of connection turn into all-out confessionals and then – perplexingly for the narrator – gaping disconnection. Not the Booker prize: The Canal by Lee Rourke
  • His great sensitiveness is touchingly shown in his representation of this first contact with the Lord; the circumstances are present to him in the minutest details; he still remembers the Very hour. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • Though Ms. Peters is in fragile voice, her acting is touchingly intense, and her colleagues, Mr. Burstein in particular, give powerhouse performances that couldn't be bettered. When Faith Draws Blood
  • She, rather touchingly, has said she takes full responsibility for her morbid obesity. Times, Sunday Times
  • Measured against other degenerate cultures, we are still, in some respects, at the stage of a touchingly maladroit infancy.
  • Is alas, this old miscellaneous hair's starting Te is getting more malicious ......" E eyebrow old nun delicate and touchingly says.
  • The real takeaway you get from the film is the same one his daughters touchingly acknowledge in the denouement - there's never anything wrong with making a stand against social injustice.
  • She, rather touchingly, has said she takes full responsibility for her morbid obesity. Times, Sunday Times
  • Touchingly, in his own lecture on the Variations, Schoenberg cites Brahms's F major Cello Sonata and Violin Concerto as pieces that were thought of as "indigestible" and Music news, reviews, comment and features | guardian.co.uk
  • Most of all, he remains touchingly convinced of his powers of persuasion.
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