disheartenedly

English

Etymology

From disheartened + -ly.

Adverb

disheartenedly (comparative more disheartenedly, superlative most disheartenedly)

  1. In a disheartened manner, dispiritedly.
    • 1906, H. F. Prevost Battersby, India under Royal Eyes, London: George Allen, Chapter XXXIV, The New Army, p. 416,
      [] when one looked, on arriving in India, to make acquaintance with the new conditions one learnt not only that they had not as yet come into being but that those responsible for their conception were, in many cases, still struggling disheartenedly to make a start.
    • 1944, Emily Carr, The House of All Sorts, "Punk,"
      The dog suffered my hand on his collar; he rose and shambled disheartenedly at my side, carrying the only luggage he possessed—his name and a broken heart.

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