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begrudgingly

[ bih-gruhj-ing-lee ]

adverb

  1. with or despite feelings of resentment or envy:

    With virtually no advertising, he is swamped with work—a fact I begrudgingly admit because he's too busy to take me anywhere!

  2. reluctantly; unwillingly:

    I've eaten calf liver begrudgingly, but ultimately I don't like sitting down to a big slab of organ meat.



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Word History and Origins

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Example Sentences

It is not a scarce commodity to be meted out begrudgingly or in short portions.

About: A stop-motion animated comedy about two slackers who begrudgingly take low-level jobs on an intergalactic warship.

I begrudgingly listened to the soundtrack of Titanic, a big underground hit in Afghanistan then.

She begrudgingly danced around a sombrero with me but soon rushed off to a basketball game with the grip and electric departments.

The two first met several months ago, when Once was in rehearsals in Cambridge, Mass., and Hansard begrudgingly went to see it.

The Peruvian captain begrudgingly gave Porter a list of all the English vessels in those waters.

Every moment of his time which Douglas forced him to spend answering irrelevant charges he gave begrudgingly.

"And the old twin fathers," I added almost begrudgingly, as I cast him my last treasure.

Perhaps such discussions are for the purpose of "making no concessions" or if they must be made, of making them begrudgingly.

Mrs. Melker had it good from the day she came, she said, begrudgingly.

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begrudgerybeg the question