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furtively
[ fur-tiv-lee ]
adverb
- in a surreptitious, secret, or stealthy way:
For decades, people living under Soviet censorship listened furtively to the news from the free world beamed by Radio Free Europe or the Voice of America.
Moonshine is untaxed liquor, furtively produced by the light of the moon—or at least out of the immediate reach of law enforcement.
- in a sly or shifty way:
In the next scene, he darts furtively into a pharmacy storeroom to steal poison.
Word History and Origins
Origin of furtively1
Example Sentences
Bingeing can look different for different people, but for Specter, it involves “shoving food furtively into my mouth as quickly and passively” as possible, she writes.
Bingeing can look different for different people, but for Specter, it involves “shoving food furtively into my mouth as quickly and passively” as possible, she writes.
They are written not to inform or motivate but to titillate, as if they were meant to be read furtively, at night, in the dark.
Some at the top of the Labour Party are beginning to think, if a little furtively, of the aftermath of 4 July, too.
As the men entered her home, Ms. Mukantaganda said her husband, a preacher, prayed for her and their two small children and furtively told her where he had hidden some money in case she survived.
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