English edit

Etymology edit

nuanced +‎ -ly

Adverb edit

nuancedly (comparative more nuancedly, superlative most nuancedly)

  1. In a nuanced way.
    • 1994, Babette E Babich, Nietzsche's Philosophy of Science, page 41:
      For Karl Löwith and Karl Jaspers and, more recently and nuancedly, Wolfgang Müller-Lauter, Nietzsche's philosophy is intrinsically oppositional or "contradictory."
    • 2003, Denise Roman, Fragmented Identities, page 81:
      Finally, the notion that anti-Semitism can be explained here, as expressed, as a point of disjuncture between reality (the existence or not of a Jewish minority) and a discourse (anti-Semitism) that nuancedly characterizes some Romanian discourses today, enables one to understand the dynamic of the anti-Semitic discourse […].
    • 2005, Ien Ang, On Not Speaking Chinese, page 60:
      But such an argument can only meaningfully be made with a nuancedly situated and historically informed sense of the stakes involved.