English

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Etymology

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From southward +‎ -ly.

Adverb

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southwardly (comparative more southwardly, superlative most southwardly)

  1. southwards, towards the south
    • 1850, William Cullen Bryant, Letters of a Traveller[1]:
      As we proceeded southwardly, the temperature grew milder, and the day closed with a calm and pleasant sunset.
    • 1916, H. G. Wells, What is Coming?[2]:
      The Scandinavian peoples have developed a tendency to an extra-European outlook, to look west and east rather than southwardly, to be pacifist and progressive in a manner essentially American.
    • 2000 June 16, John G. Lyon, “The Solar Wind-Magnetosphere-Ionosphere System”, in Science[3], volume 288, number 5473, →DOI, pages 1987–1991:
      Dungey (7 ) first sketched the consequences for an interplanetary (solar wind) magnetic field (IMF) that was oppositely directed (southwardly) from the generally northward terrestrial field.

Adjective

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southwardly (comparative more southwardly, superlative most southwardly)

  1. southwards, towards the south