grandly

Definition of grandlynext

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of grandly With its proximity to the Queensboro Bridge and a Home Depot, Le Domaine, as the building is grandly named, feels a long way from France. Emma Allen, New Yorker, 30 Mar. 2026 The palace, looming grandly just behind the stage, was lit up with a dynamic video projection, integrating it into the concert — the first time the historic and deeply symbolic structure had ever been used for a pop show. Nicole Fell, HollywoodReporter, 21 Mar. 2026 In Dumas’ work, fights and duels and brave assaults on prisons are done grandly, out in the open. Christopher Arnott, Hartford Courant, 11 Mar. 2026 There are, needless to say, daddy issues aplenty here — with Daddy himself out of the fray, retired to a grandly crumbling rural estate, grieving the deaths of his young daughter and devoted brother, and very gradually writing his memoirs. Guy Lodge, Variety, 5 Mar. 2026 At nuclear summits, the Kremlin’s leader could grandly sit across from the incumbent in the White House – just like in the glory days of the Cold War – to decide on matters of international security. Matthew Chance, CNN Money, 4 Feb. 2026 Someone asked him what made the old 49ers teams so cinematic, and Lott answered by gesturing grandly behind him, where Montana was smiling for the paparazzi. Daniel Brown, New York Times, 1 Feb. 2026 Every hurdle has been met and overcome, if at the last minute, and grandly. Roger Simmons, The Orlando Sentinel, 11 Jan. 2026 In the shadow of Mount Etna and brushing up against the Ionian Sea, Sicily’s second-largest city was grandly rebuilt in imposing Baroque style using lava stone following a devastating 17th-century earthquake. Rosalyn Wikeley, Condé Nast Traveler, 10 Jan. 2026
Recent Examples of Synonyms for grandly
Adverb
  • The Hormuz closure confirmed this shift loudly, expensively, and irreversibly.
    Tenzin Seldon, Fortune, 23 Apr. 2026
  • The City Football Group, with Manchester City as the jewel in its crown, is a prime — and expensively-assembled — example.
    Phil Hay, New York Times, 20 Mar. 2026
Adverb
  • Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, the district-court judge and one of the few trial participants who managed to acquit herself honorably, told them to suck it up.
    Gideon Lewis-Kraus, New Yorker, 20 May 2026
  • Owen was introduced in Season 5 as a rogue Army trauma surgeon who was honorably discharged following the death of his entire platoon.
    Max Gao, Variety, 8 May 2026
Adverb
  • Something about the floral blue pattern on this dress feels luxuriously elegant.
    Jasmine Gomez, Travel + Leisure, 17 May 2026
  • Now, the Nuggets have the option to spend luxuriously next season — a choice that would’ve been available to them regardless — or avoid the luxury tax again and save millions of dollars.
    Bennett Durando, Denver Post, 8 May 2026
Adverb
  • This heroically eccentric diner draws no distinction between vegetarianism and hedonism.
    Ligaya Mishan, New York Times, 11 May 2026
  • Our military has performed heroically.
    Chris Boccia, ABC News, 30 Apr. 2026
Adverb
  • On Monday night, extravagantly dressed celebrities and designers made their grand ascent up the Met Gala's staircase, marking the start of fashion's biggest night and raising money for New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute.
    Emily Bogle, NPR, 4 May 2026
  • If so, what is such a large and extravagantly funded force meant to do?
    Benjamin Wallace-Wells, New Yorker, 29 Mar. 2026
Adverb
  • Just two rounds of Premier League football remain, and matchweek 37 looms large at both ends of the table.
    Sukhman Singh, New York Times, 16 May 2026
  • Ironically, programs like this illustrate the bind in which both Mellon and the humanities writ large find themselves.
    Tyler Austin Harper, The Atlantic, 12 Feb. 2026
Adverb
  • Art that’s anchored in real pain almost always leaves open a channel to beauty—or at least some more richly humane response to life.
    Sebastian Smee, The Atlantic, 16 May 2026
  • But the journey there is richly rendered through Harris’ poetic sensibility.
    Katie Walsh, Boston Herald, 15 May 2026
Adverb
  • The droll futuristic touches of the opening scenes — a delivery drone that could pass for a mini-UFO carrying parcels high above a city coastline; a robot crossing guard trailed by a string of children — hold the promise of low-key humor.
    David Rooney, HollywoodReporter, 16 May 2026
  • No one on the island, with the exception of certain high-ranking officials, can escape the challenges presented by the lack of oil, Piñon said.
    Julia Jacobo, ABC News, 16 May 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Grandly.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/grandly. Accessed 23 May. 2026.

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