sternlier

Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word sternlier. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word sternlier, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say sternlier in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word sternlier you have here. The definition of the word sternlier will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofsternlier, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.

English

Adverb

sternlier

  1. (rare, poetic) comparative form of sternly: more sternly
    • a. 1839, John Fitchett, edited by Robert Roscoe, King Alfred: A Poem, volume V, London: William Pickering, published 1842, page 384, lines 1473–1474:
      To whom, as more amazed and sternlier stung, / Faltering, the traitor urged this wild address: []
    • 1843 June, G P, “Rhymed Sketches of Scottish Peasant Life”, in Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine for 1843, volume X, number CXIV, Edinburgh: William Tait, ; London: Simpkin, Marshall, & Co.; Dublin: John Cumming, section I, page 384, column 1:
      And haply, with the cream of sacred lore / Was blent some modern’s sweet but thrilling tale, / That made his eye gleam sternlier than before,— / A tale of Times when Scotland’s stifled wail, / And Persecutor’s shout, were blent on every gale.
    • 1865, John Poyer, “The Lady Godiva”, in St. Thomas à Becket; and Other Poems, London: Edward Moxon & Co., , page 94:
      In vain she’d sought through many a striving hour / The word to break which stole the people’s bread; / His freezing brow did but the darker lower, / While sternlier to his will the tax he wed.
    • 1869, Robert Browning, “X. The Pope.”, in The Ring and the Book. , volume IV, London: Smith, Elder and Co., →OCLC, pages 53–54, lines 1224–1228:
      Accept the swift and rueful death, / Taught, somewhat sternlier than is wont, what waits / The ambiguous creature,—how the one black tuft / Steadies the aim of the arrow just as well / As the wide faultless white on the bird’s breast.
    • 1894, Henrik Ibsen, translated by C[harles] H[arold] Herford, Brand: A Dramatic Poem in Five Acts, London: William Heinemann, page 95:
      I know no law that sternlier deals / With strangers than with kindred blood.
    • a. 1925, Manmohan Ghose, edited by Lotika Ghose, Adam Alarmed in Paradise: An Epic of Eden During The Great War (Collected Poems; IV), : University of Calcutta, published 1977, book I, canto VI, page 69:
      Even when Luther purged, / Trimmed the sacred fire, / Sternlier Calvin urged, / Then did he expire.
    • 1943 July 21, Leslie Pinckney Hill, “Of Preparedness”, in Charles Clayton Morrison, editor, The Christian Century, Chicago, Ill.: Christian Century Press, page 845, column 2:
      NOW not alone against a world on fire / Must preparation speed. Sure, the great gun / Must be supplied ton on unnumbered ton / Of quick munition. Faster, farther, higher / The deadly plane must flash, and the entire / Substance and spirit of the land be won / For that impregnable, last bastion / Which freedom’s dear necessities require. / But, sternlier still, for this we must prepare: / To cast out devils, yet refuse to be / Devils in turn; []
    • 1946, Rainer Maria Rilke, translated by J[ames] B[lair] Leishman, Sonnets to Orpheus, 2nd edition, London: The Hogarth Press, , published 1949, section X, page 107:
      Checking the glorious hand’s flaunting of lovelier leisure, now for some stubborner work sternlier it fashions the stone.