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English
Etymology
From Middle English gentilly, equivalent to gentle + -ly.
Adverb
gentilly (comparative more gentilly, superlative most gentilly)
- (Early Modern) Obsolete spelling of gently.
Middle English
Etymology
From gentil + -ly; see further at gentle.
Adverb
gentilly
- Like a member of the gentry: in the manner of someone of gentle birth.
- 15th c., Anonymous, Sir Gowther, in 1995, Anne Laskaya, Eve Salisbury (eds.), "The Middle English Breton lays", Kalamazoo, Michigan: Medieval Institute Publications pp. 263-307, ll. 39-45.
A mangere con thei make;
Knyghtus of honowr tho furst dey
Justyd gently hom to pley
Here shaftes gan thei shake.
On the morow the lordes gente
Made a riall tournement
For that lady sake;- They made a feast. That first day, honorable knights jousted like gentlemen homeward to the contest, and began to shatter their lances. The next day the gentle lords made a royal tournament for the lady's sake.
- (by extension) In a manner that reflects the virtues or customs associated with those of gentle birth: generously, courteously, gracefully, nobly, etc.
1387–1400, Geoffrey Chaucer, “The Knyghtes Tale”, in The Canterbury Tales, ,
→OCLC; republished in [
William Thynne], editor,
The Workes of Geffray Chaucer Newlye Printed, ,
:
[
Richard Grafton for]
Iohn Reynes ,
1542,
→OCLC,
folio xii, recto, column 1:
And Emelye hym loueth so tenderly
And he her ſerueth ſo gentelly
That neuer was ther no woꝛde hē bytwene
Of ielouſye, oꝛ of any other tene- And Emily loved him so tenderly
And he served her so nobly and faithfully
That between them, there was never a single word
Of jealousy, or any other trouble.
Descendants