sternliest

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English

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Adverb

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sternliest

  1. (rare, poetic) superlative form of sternly: most sternly
    • 1620, Tho[mas] Dekker, “The Worme of Conscience”, in Dekker His Dreame. In Which, Beeing Rapt with a Poeticall Enthusiasme, the Great Volumes of Heauen and Hell to Him Were Opened, in Which He Read Many Wonderfull Things., London: Nicholas Okes, →OCLC, page 35:
      I tooke delights / In plucking Apples from t’Heſperian Trees, / Which Eating, I grew Learn’d: adde to All theſe / My Priuate Readings, which more School’d my Soule, / Then Tutors, when they ſternliest did Controll / With Frownes or Rods: []
    • 1837 November, [John Sterling], “[Poetry by our New Contributor.] Mirabeau.”, in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, volume XLII, number CCLXV, Edinburgh: William Blackwood & Sons; London: T[homas] Cadell, [], page 594:
      The law is holier than a sage’s prayer; / The godlike power bestowed on men demands of them a godlike care; / And noblest gifts, if basely used, will sternliest avenge the wrong, / And grind with slavish pangs the slave whom once they made divinely strong.
    • 1889, Arthur Bennett, “The Inexplicable Sex”, in The Music of My Heart, Manchester: Palmer & Howe, []; London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co., page 123:
      In them [women], hypocrisy itself can charm: / It makes our young devotion doubly warm, / Draws while it drives, lures while it whispers “Go!” / Means “Yes!” when sternliest it answers “No!” / Request a kiss—at once a negative / Their lips of coral sternly frame!—but if / You note their eyes, the answer there belies it, / And he who doubts me, well, suppose he tries it?
    • 1892 November, Aubrey [Thomas] de Vere, “[To [Alfred, Lord] Tennyson: The Tributes of His Friends] The Poet”, in James [Thomas] Knowles, editor, The Nineteenth Century: A Monthly Review, volume XXXII, number CLXXXIX, London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company [], page 841:
      None sang of Love more nobly; few as well; / Of Friendship none with pathos so profound; / Of Duty sternliest-proved when myrtle-crowned; / Of English grove and rivulet, mead and dell: []
    • [1949, Clarence Stratton, “Adverbs: Kinds·​Rules·​Uses·​Purposes·​Effects”, in Guide to Correct English, New York, N.Y., Toronto, Ont.: Whittlesey House, McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., page 193:
      Two-syllabled adverbs may have these forms, but they are unusual: positive sternly comparative sternlier superlative sternliest]