natantly
English
editEtymology
editAdverb
editnatantly (comparative more natantly, superlative most natantly)
- In a floating manner; swimmingly.
- 1948, Edward Thompson, A Seed in Spring, page 97:
- Ignoring the fact that certain of the other twelve thousand white inhabitants of the town might be natantly inclined, she had sought to have the country club build a pool of its own where membership was more closely guarded .
- 1980, The Irish Naturalists' Journal - Volume 20, page 84:
- A second group, with the joing positioned more anteriorly and with shorter, less natantly-adapted antennules, became active (though not necessarily efficient) swimmers.
- 2011, Xiaoting Luo, Shumei Li, Sisi Li, Liang Xiong, Minghua Dong, “Relationship between protective effect of hesperidin extraction on exercise fatigue and antioxidation”, in 4th International Conference on Biomedical Engineering and Informatics (BMEI):
- If the rat didn't move natantly, it was forced to swim by the stick.