Examine how kindly the Hebrew manners of speech mix and incorporate with the English language --Addison.
2. In a kind manner; congenially; with good will; with a disposition to make others happy, or to oblige.
Be kindly affectioned one to another, with brotherly love. --Rom. xii. 10.
Kindly \Kind"ly\ (k[imac]nd"l[y^]), a. [Compar. {Kindlier} (k[imac]nd"l[i^]*[~e]r); superl. {Kindliest}.] [AS. cyndelic. See {Kind}, n. ] 1. According to the kind or nature; natural. [R.]
The kindly fruits of the earth. --Book of Com. Prayer.
An herd of bulls whom kindly rage doth sting. --Spenser.
Whatsoever as the Son of God he may do, it is kindly for Him as the Son of Man to save the sons of men. --L. Andrews.
2. Humane; congenial; sympathetic; hence, disposed to do good to; benevolent; gracious; kind; helpful; as, kindly affections, words, acts, etc.
The shade by which my life was crossed, . . . Has made me kindly with my kind. --Tennyson.
Note: ``Nothing ethical was connoted in kindly once: it was simply the adjective of kind. But it is God's ordinance that kind should be kindly, in our modern sense of the word as well; and thus the word has attained this meaning.'' --Trench.
In the visitor's book I found an entry in Hindi, kindly translated by the writer. It was a cryptic piece of Indian advice.
But whether the markets would interpret any widening of the target range in such a kindly light, remains to be seen. Again, with the ECA, it is hard to anticipate the impact of any changes, without seeing details of the alterations proposed.
Few people apparently felt as kindly toward Mr. Evans's father, whom a U.S. congressman once called "the corporate embodiment of 'Jaws.'"
English politicians apparently strike a kindly, avuncular chord in the heart of Graf Otto Lambsdorff, chairman of Germany's liberal free democrats.
According to one banker at a leading French house, the French Treasury made it known Monday it would not look kindly on any French bank participating in the group.
The markets have treated Mr Kenneth Clarke kindly so far, but he does not have much room for error.
It had entered my life through a Weekend FT reader who kindly posted me a fragment of his plant in a metal canister just at the time of a wave of terrorist letter bombs.
Sandy McIntosh didn't take this kindly.
Does he really believe that the rich are insulated from the pain of bereavement, of illness, of marital break-up? He describes the rich as 'kindly, witty and urbane'.
Richard Nixon doesn't expect the news media ever to love him, but the man who resigned the presidency in disgrace thinks the public will judge him more kindly once people tour his new library.
Rosewell kindly stood in. He has an interesting pedigree.
There are those in Umno who would not look kindly on any move that might threaten the position of the Malays.
If it is done, and done well, I dare say we will look kindly upon the turbines of the West Riding.
This is a love story, told largely through the reactions of the central character, Duniya, to a persistent and kindly suitor. Farah's fiction is rarely as simple as it seems.
While Nicaragua welcomed the observer mission headed by former President Carter, the Sandinistas have not looked kindly on some other would-be observers.
"I told the judge I didn't have a prayer of getting a not-guilty verdict because the jury wouldn't look kindly on his absence," said Houlon.
An article in Highlife magazine's November edition extolls Atlanta's virtues: "It's climate is kindly, it's temperate and attractive." The Houston photo has publishers stumped.
In the season premier two weeks ago, Dr. Gideon proposed getting rid of the hospital's kindly old chief of staff, Dr. Daniel Auschlander, in a cost-cutting move.
The poll results appear to reflect Mr. Silva Herzog's charisma, rather than his penchant for austerity, to which Mexicans don't take kindly.
The FASB, however, may not look kindly on the Chrysler plan.
The quarters are kindly described as spartan: no water, dim overhead bulbs and little ventilation.
Reading the letter he kindly wrote on my behalf, I even thought the Navy might start me off as an admiral.
Once my favorite stocks Were those that rose like yeast, But these days I look kindly On those that drop the least.
And Friedman, a golfing family man with an alert, kindly face who could see patterns where others saw only chaos.
Although this case isn't seen as pivotal on its own, industry observers said it's a sign that the coal operators association doesn't look kindly on companies negotiating their own separate agreements with the union.
We know Americans don't take kindly to sudden change.
Internationalization is not viewed kindly by American labor unions for obvious reasons.
Hence his extraordinary eclecticism that leads the authors, rather kindly, to suggest that his thought had many 'layers'. In fact, it was riddled with contradictions.
"Physicians wouldn't take kindly to consumers coming in and telling them what they wanted," says a Merrell Dow spokesman.
In most of Europe, by contrast, smokers take their rights so seriously that they may not take kindly to efforts by their employers to help them quit.