nowise
English
WOTD – 16 August 2012
Etymology
From Middle English nowyse, no-wyse, no wyse, equivalent to no (“none, not any”) + wise (“way, manner”).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈnoʊwaɪz/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈnəʊwaɪz/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- Rhymes: -əʊwaɪz, -oʊwaɪz
Adverb
nowise (not comparable)
- (archaic or dialect) (In) no way, (in) no manner, definitely not.
- Synonym: nohow
- 1850, Thomas Carlyle, “The present time”, in Latter-Day Pamphlets:
- To raise the Sham-Noblest, and solemnly consecrate him by whatever method, new-devised, or slavishly adhered to from old wont, this, little as we may regard it, is, in all times and countries, a practical blasphemy, and Nature will in nowise forget it. Alas, there lies the origin, the fatal necessity, of modern Democracy everywhere.
- 1851, Herman Melville, Moby Dick (fiction):
- But that did in nowise mend the matter, or at all soften the hard heart of the learned gentleman with the copy of Blackstone.
- 1996 (summer), Raymond Jarvi, “Hjalmar Söderberg on August Strindberg”, in Scandinavian Studies, volume 68, number 3, page 343:
- His article was received with keen interest by Fredrik Vult von Steijern, the newspaper's cultural editor, who in turn paid the writer an honorarium of twenty crowns — nowise a modest sum at that time — despite the fact that the article never appeared in Dagens Nyheter.
- 2006 (fall), Nate Haken, “Dolphins Dancing Somewhere off the Coast of Cuba”, in The Massachusetts Review, volume 47, number 3, page 410:
- I am going to create a trigger to the feelings of nostalgia, that this time at sea will nowise be lost.
Translations
in no manner
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Anagrams
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