compromisedly
English
Etymology
From compromised + -ly.
Adverb
compromisedly (comparative more compromisedly, superlative most compromisedly)
- In a compromised way.
- 1977, Architecture: Opportunities, Achievements : a Report of the Annual Conference of the Royal Institute of British Architects Held at the University of Hull, 14 to 17 July 1976[1], RIBA Publications, →ISBN, page 45:
- It isn't like those typical English apartment blocks that would like to be high - but have been compromisedly made low - and separated by those awful connecting links.
- 2002, Bruce Babington, Launder and Gilliat, Manchester University Press, →ISBN, page 201:
- Sim's progression/regression through the films is from the defeated centrality of Folly to be Wise to more marginal or compromisedly surviving figures.
- 2014 April 24, Susan Wiseman, Writing Metamorphosis in the English Renaissance: 1550–1700, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 130:
- Thus, Caliban is troubling because he is, if compromisedly, human.