Rancidly
1Rancidly — Ran cid*ly (r[a^]n s[i^]d*l[y^]), adv. In a rancid manner. [1913 Webster] …
2rancidly — adverb In a rancid manner …
3rancidly — ran·cid·ly …
4rancidly — adverb see rancid …
5rancid — rancidly, adv. rancidness, rancidity, n. /ran sid/, adj. 1. having a rank, unpleasant, stale smell or taste, as through decomposition, esp. of fats or oils: rancid butter. 2. (of an odor or taste) rank, unpleasant, and stale: a rancid smell. 3.… …
6Robert Armin — (c. 1563 ndash; 1615) was an English actor, a member of the Lord Chamberlain s Men. He became the leading comedy actor with the troupe associated with William Shakespeare following the departure of Will Kempe around 1600. Also a popular comic… …
7rancid — adjective a) Being rank in taste or smell. The house was deserted, with a rancid half eaten meal still on the dinner table. b) offensive His remarks were rancid; everyone got up and left. See Also: rancidification, rancidly …
8rancid — adjective 1》 (of foods containing fat or oil) smelling or tasting unpleasant as a result of being stale. 2》 highly unpleasant; repugnant. Derivatives rancidity noun rancidly adverb rancidness noun Origin C17: from L. rancidus stinking …
9rankly — ad. 1. Luxuriantly, with vigorous growth. 2. Rancidly, with strong scent. 3. Coarsely, grossly …
10rancid — [ran′sid] adj. [L rancidus < rancere, to be rank] 1. having the bad smell or taste of stale fats or oils; spoiled 2. repugnant rancidity [ran′sid′ə tē] n. rancidness rancidly adv …