See also: stoutheartedly

English edit

Etymology edit

stout-hearted +‎ -ly

Adverb edit

stout-heartedly (comparative more stout-heartedly, superlative most stout-heartedly)

  1. Alternative form of stoutheartedly
    • 2012, Maureen M. Berry, Boots Full of Memories, →ISBN, page 4:
      With this in mind, my father hid my brother and sister (who were still quite small), under his bulky overcoat with hand-made pockets. I walked, stout-heartedly, beside him. This way my parents hoped and prayed that the Turks would see only one child and let us pass by unharmed.
    • 1982, Ellen Schiff, From Stereotype to Metaphor: The Jew in Contemporary Drama, →ISBN, page 163:
      And he tries stout-heartedly to explain away Lorenzo Clark's anti-Semitic jibes and mean tricks by pretending that the black is half-crazed by his terminal malady.