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Coldly   /kˈoʊldli/   Listen
adverb
Coldly  adv.  In a cold manner; without warmth, animation, or feeling; with indifference; calmly. "Withdraw unto some private place, And reason coldly of your grievances."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Coldly" Quotes from Famous Books



... Hull and Joseph, shrinking away from the icy water, but too benumbed to cry! Small wonder that they quickly yielded up their souls after the short struggle for life so gloomily and so coldly begun. Of Judge Sewall's fourteen children but three survived him, a majority dying in infancy; and of fifteen children of his friend Cotton Mather but two ...
— Customs and Fashions in Old New England • Alice Morse Earle

... morning after Madame, until I accidently heard in answer by Hargrave that Madame had not slept during the night, "All right, girls, the cough is delightfully bad." This put me and Schillie upon employing our spare time in teaching them ourselves, which announcement was at first received rather coldly; but they derived such infinite amusement from our inaptness to the business that they were quite impatient if anything prevented us performing this office. With the utmost gravity and demureness Gatty would bring me the same lesson to repeat every day; and though I must, in justice to myself, ...
— Yr Ynys Unyg - The Lonely Island • Julia de Winton

... politically upon the misfortunes of my country are my country's enemies—and mine," she said coldly. ...
— The Secret Witness • George Gibbs

... pause, during which the imperial son-in-law, coldly received when he expected to be welcomed, attempted to enter into some light conversation with the fair slave Astarte, who knelt behind her mistress. This was interrupted by the Princess commanding her attendant ...
— Waverley Volume XII • Sir Walter Scott

... rather than not censure, he will accuse a man of virtue. Everything he meddleth with he either findeth imperfect or maketh so; neither is there anything that soundeth so harsh in his ear as the commendation of another; whereto yet perhaps he fashionably and coldly assenteth, but with such an after-clause of exception as doth more than mar his former allowance; and if he list not to give a verbal disgrace, yet he shakes his head and smiles, as if his silence should say, I could and will not. And when himself is praised without excess, he complains ...
— Character Writings of the 17th Century • Various


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