See also: Southernly

English edit

Etymology edit

southern +‎ -ly

Adjective edit

southernly (comparative more southernly, superlative most southernly)

  1. Southerly, somewhat southern.

Adverb edit

southernly (comparative more southernly, superlative most southernly)

  1. Southward, southerly.
    • 1832, Records and Briefs of the United States Supreme Court, page 856:
      [] the said river flowed in a southernly direction, and thence around said Dean's Island, and at or about the southwest end thereof the river turned []
    • 1904, Indianapolis (Indiana), The General Ordinances of the City of Indianapolis, page 244:
      [] thence in a southernly direction in the center line of Alabama street to the center line of Fifteenth street; thence in an easternly direction in the  []
  2. In a Southern manner, in a way typical of a Southerner or of the South (the southern United States).
    • 2012, Heather Graham, And One Rode West: A Novel, Loveswept, →ISBN, page 265:
      “The good Lord seemed fond of sending us southerners many trials!” Christa murmured, [] “We were ever in sympathy with our more southernly sisters!”
    • 2013, Dr. M. Jeanne Dolphus Cotton, Core' S. Cotton, A Three Hundred and Sixty -Degree Perspective: A Mother - Daughter Journey of Come Here Meets Been There, →ISBN:
      Mama and Daddy, being typical southerners, had also taught us to politely [offer food] [] [I] only politely offer Phe Phe a slice of my apple to fulfill my southernly duty.
    • 2017, Ginny Wilder, All My Words Have Holes in Them: Simple Daily Meditations, Church Publishing, Inc., →ISBN, page 92:
      Our school experience was blissfully and southernly white.