double-handedly
See also: doublehandedly
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
double-handed + -ly
Adverb
double-handedly (comparative more double-handedly, superlative most double-handedly)
- Using two people.
- 2013, Barrie Smith, Jeremy Evans, Pat Manley, The Sailing Bible: The Complete Guide for All Sailors from Novice to Experienced Skipper, →ISBN:
- Dinghies are designed to be sailed single-handedly or double-handedly, but some larger cruising dinghies may have room for four or more people on board.
- Using both hands at the same time.
- 2007, Darien Pritchard, Dynamic Bodyuse for Effective, Strain-Free Massage, →ISBN, page 168:
- Working double-handedly also conserves your hands in large kneading strokes, for example when you are working on the adductors on the inside of the thigh.
- By means of two approaches or agents
- 2009, Brian Castro, The Bath Fugues, →ISBN:
- I said I was writing my memoirs, a choppy musical dedicated to counterpoint, without the axes of time and place, collapsing in upon itself because the notes will inevitably run out, returning, elaborating, crisscrossing, double-handedly creating variations upon a theme.
- 2014, George Graham, The Disordered Mind: An Introduction to Philosophy of Mind and Mental Illness, →ISBN:
- The combination of discontent and economic collapse brought about the revolution. It did not do so simply double-handedly.
- Duplicitously or hypocritically.
- 2010, Nicholas C. Eliopoulos, Constantine Versus the Bankers, →ISBN, page 207:
- NATO works double-handedly against Albanians and Serbs.
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