Advertisement
Advertisement
blithely
[ blahyth-lee, blahyth-lee ]
adverb
- without much thought, concern, or care:
I blithely went ahead with my project without really considering the impact it would have on my career.
- in a joyous or happy way; cheerfully or lightheartedly:
Left to my own devices I would blithely live the rest of my days imagining new recipes and tweaking old ones.
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of blithely1
Example Sentences
She blithely tells her husband that if they were to lose all their wealth, she wouldn’t want to keep living.
In another episode, she slides pans of cake batter into her oven and blithely coos, “Good night, sweetheart.â€
This is why it's so frustrating to see mainstream journalists, as Reuters did Friday, blithely argue there's a "clash" between Kennedy's "long to-do list" and Trump's alleged eagerness to cut back on federal spending.
It’s a crime against the decency and the English language that the words “deport†and “deportation†are flung around so blithely, not only by Trump and his hand-puppet, Stephen Miller, but by the mainstream media.
When we catch up with her in the late 1930s, she’s gallivanting around the south of France with her friends, the group blithely unaware of the horrors that await with the rise of Adolf Hitler.
Advertisement
Related ˜yÐÄvlogs
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse