neighborlily
English
editEtymology
editFrom neighborly + -ly.
Adverb
editneighborlily (comparative more neighborlily, superlative most neighborlily)
- In a neighborly manner.
- 1906, A Key to Puzzledom; or, Complete Handbook of the Enigmatic Art, page 104:
- Old Toby rises from his mat, / Sniffs neighborlily at the cat, / And yawns, (a trifle wide at that,) / With an old friend’s audacity;
- 1922 July, Ida M. Evans, “His Wife’s Money”, in Cosmopolitan, volume LXXIII, number 1, page 72:
- The Sloan and Padgway places adjoined neighborlily.
- 1931 April, Margaret C. Moloney, “Leave It to Mike”, in The Catholic World, volume CXXXIII, number 793, page 62:
- The highway skirted the front, and the lake with its great family of wavelets ran in neighborlily at the back.
- 1933, Albert Halper, Union Square, published 1990, page 42:
- Both men greeted and nodded neighborlily at each other.
- 1952, Ernest Buckler, The Mountain and the Valley, New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt and Company, page 279:
- David stepped up the tempo of the talk as surely, as neighborlily, as ever.
- 2008, Adam Nicolson, Earls of Paradise, HarperPress, →ISBN, page 44:
- […]; and it was an act of charity and neighbourliness, ‘in living, walking and neighbourlily accompanying one another, with reconciling of differences at that time, if they be any’.