See also: longwindedly

English edit

Etymology edit

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long-windedly (comparative more long-windedly, superlative most long-windedly)

  1. In a long-winded manner; employing more lengthy phrasing than required.
    • 1814, James Gilchrist, Reason the True Arbiter of Language; Custom a Tyrant[1], London: J. Johnson, page 21:
      [] an Italian piece of many parts and much intricacy—it is only a Master Braham or Madame Catalani who has got throat long enough and flexible enough for it; which stretching out as gracefully as a hen drinketh water, she cackles out the whole piece as sweetly as Orpheus, as dexterously as a fiddler’s elbow, as long-windedly as the pipe of an ass, and as proudly as if she had laid a golden egg.
    • 1875, George Macdonald, chapter 18, in Malcolm[2], volume I, London: Henry S. King, pages 219–220:
      One who had caught a glimpse of the shining yet solemn eyes of the youth, as he walked home, would wonder no longer that he should talk as he did—so sedately, yet so poetically—so long-windedly, if you like, yet so sensibly—even wisely.
    • 1962, Isaac Babel quoted by Konstantin Paustovsky in “Reminiscences of Babel” in Patricia Blake and Max Hayward (editors), Dissonant Voices in Soviet Literature, New York: Pantheon, p. 50,[3]
      Perhaps my sentences are too short. This may be partly due to my chronic asthma. I can’t talk long-windedly; I’m short of breath.
    • 2009, J. M. Coetzee, “Adriana”, in Summertime, London: Harvill Secker:
      But then I thought, perhaps this is how these Dutch Protestants behave when they fall in love: prudently, long-windedly, without fire, without grace.

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