cheerly
adverb
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L187434 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
adj
Etymology: From cheer + -ly.
- Cheerful, gay; not gloomy.
“Wel ſaid, thou look'ſt cheerely, / And Ile be with thee quickly: yet thou lieſt / In the bleake aire.”
“The first thing that roused me from my meditations, was a cheerly voice that saluted me as I was approaching Tattersall's; round whose gates a detachment of tilburies, stanhopes, and led-horses were clustered."”
adv
Etymology: From Middle English cheerly, cherly, cherely, cheerliche, equivalent to cheer + -ly.
- Cheerily, cheerfully, heartily; briskly.
“My louing Lord, I take my leaue of you, [...] Not ſicke, although I haue to do with death, / But luſtie, yong, and cheerely drawing breath.”
“What matters me who wears the crown of France? / Whether a Richard or a Charles possess it? / They reap the glory—they enjoy the spoil— / We pay—we bleed!—The sun would shine as cheerly, / The rains of heaven as seasonably fall, / Tho' neither of these royal pests existed.”