English

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Etymology

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From estimable +‎ -ly.

Adverb

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estimably (comparative more estimably, superlative most estimably)

  1. In an estimable manner; deserving of esteem.
    • 1853, Fredrika Bremer, The Home[1]:
      The name of the sisters Frank stood estimably at the head of this useful establishment; but it is a question whether it would have prospered to such an extent, whether it would have developed itself so beautifully and well without the assistance of a person who, however, has carefully concealed his activity from the eye of the public, and whose name, for that reason, was never praised.
    • 1901, Miles Franklin, “Aunt Helen’s Recipe”, in My Brilliant Career, Edinburgh, London: William Blackwood and Sons, →OCLC, page 70:
      He had turned her adrift, neither a wife, widow, nor maid, and here she was, one of the most estimably lovable and noble women I have ever met.
    • 1989 April 7, Kurt Jacobsen, “Losing It”, in Chicago Reader[2]:
      Director Breillat, screenwriter for Maurice Pialat's estimably gritty Police (1985), thoroughly demolishes every trace of prurience, instead focusing on the almost dizzying conflict within Lili--her confusion over her hunger for life and her anger at it.