jingoistically
English
Etymology
jingoistic +‎ -ally
Adverb
jingoistically (comparative more jingoistically, superlative most jingoistically)
- (manner) In a jingoistic manner.
- 1976 April 26, Sally Beauman, Henry Reconsidered—Royal and Shakespearean in New York (magazine),
- But how will American audiences respond to the play? Will they find it too jingoistically English, too warmongering, or will they find it as complex and perturbing a work as the company believes it to be?
- 1980, Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters, Michigan Academician, volume 13:
- Vienna's other important liberal daily, Die Zeit, also supported the invasion of Serbia, although less jingoistically and in a more restrained tone than either the Neue Freie Presse or the Neues Wiener Tagblatt.
- 1992, Nancy Armstrong, Leonard Tennenhouse, The Imaginary Puritan: Literature, Intellectual Labor, and the Origins of Personal Life:
- Published in 1919, this anthology was jingoistically titled The Great Tradition: Selections from English and American Prose and Poetry.
- 1976 April 26, Sally Beauman, Henry Reconsidered—Royal and Shakespearean in New York (magazine),
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