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ruly
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English rewly, ruly, rewely, reweliche, from Old English hrēowlīċ (“grievous, pitiful, sad, wretched, cruel”), equivalent to rue + -ly.
Adjective
ruly (comparative rulier or more ruly, superlative ruliest or most ruly)
Etymology 2
From Middle English rewly, reoly, reowliche, from Old English hrēowlīċe (“cruelly”), equivalent to rue + -ly.
Adverb
ruly (comparative rulier or more ruly, superlative ruliest or most ruly)
Etymology 3
Back-formation from unruly, or perhaps a continuation of Middle English rewly, ruly, reuli (“subject to a religious rule, regular”), equivalent to rule + -ly, rule + -y; or perhaps from Old French rulé, reulé, rieulé (“ruled”), past participle of rieuler (“to rule”). More at rule.
Adjective
ruly (comparative rulier, superlative ruliest)
- (rare) Neat and orderly.
- 2022, Jim Crace, eden, Picador, page 224:
- What is certain is that everything they see is strange: the lifeless neatness of the courtyard, the straightness of the paths, the ruly gang of labourers in their dull uniforms and with their ageless, polished faces.
- 1610: John Marston, Histrio-Mastix, page 28 (quarto): [Perpetuana:] Nay Ile be matchlesse for a carckanet,/Whose Pearles and Diamonds plac'd with ruly rocks/Shall circle this faire necke to set it forth [.]
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Czech
Pronunciation
Noun
ruly f
- inflection of rula:
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