English

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Etymology

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From fudgy +‎ -ly.

Adverb

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fudgily (comparative more fudgily, superlative most fudgily)

  1. (rare) With the use of fudges; inaccurately or misleadingly.
    • 1971, House of Commons, Parliamentary Debates:
      [] it is far too fudgily phrased.
    • 1972, Ann Borkin, David Peterson, George Laxoff, Marina K Burt, Where the rules fail: a student's guide:
      These nodes are treated, fudgily, as if they were terminal nodes.