advisedly

With intentionality, and deliberately, usually also with a connotation of due consideration and wise choosing.

Adverb

  1. With intentionality, and deliberately, usually also with a connotation of due consideration and wise choosing.
    • […] seeing in many such occasions of common life we advisedly do renounce or waive our own opinions, absolutely yielding to the direction of others - a. 1683, Isaac Barrow, Sermon LIX, “Of obedience to our spiritual...
    • The tongue is a sharp and parlous weapon, which we are bound to keep up in the sheath, or never to draw forth but advisedly, and upon just occasion; it must ever be wielded with caution and care: to brandish it...
    • Of the remaining 580 channels, 2.5 channels had no fuel element in them and no orifice. We assumed advisedly that these transmitted twice as much air as an unorificed, unplugged channel loaded with a fuel cartridge. -...
  2. As prescribed by an authority, especially a dictionary
    • By contrast, unelemental philosophy no longer has as its focal point humanity's relation to the world. Man (I use this term advisedly) becomes an analysing spectator of his existence, as opposed to a participant in it....
    • Now when I say the seal is vicious I use the term advisedly, according to Webster's 9th New Collegiate, definition 4b - 1993, The Mountain Goats, “Beach House”:

Origin

Etymology tree English advised Middle English -ly English -ly English advisedly From advised + -ly.

Forms

more advisedly most advisedly

Antonyms

ill-advisedly inadvisedly

Related

advisedness advisability advisably inadvisably