| 释义 | 
		Definition of nobly in English: noblyadverb ˈnəʊbli 1From a family of high rank.  the nobly born Ralph d'Escures  Example sentencesExamples -  Griselda is obligated to pledge complete obedience to her nobly born husband.
 -  A man does not deserve any praise or honour just for being nobly born.
 -  The Greeks' practice of having the nobly bred women engage in weaving appears to be economic in purpose.
 -  We are not royally born, but we're nobly born.
 -  The seigneurial system was intimately bound up with the ideal of living nobly: it was designed to let seigneurs consume what peasants produced.
 -  Being nobly born, we all had our own horses.
 -  They wanted to live nobly, that is, they wanted to live without working.
 -  Most of the nobly born have at one time or another sought to find progenitors among the Companions of the Conqueror.
 -  Margaret of Oingt was a nobly born French Carthusian nun.
 -  The proportion of nobly born spouses for peers' children reached an apex during this period.
 
 2In a way that shows fine personal qualities or high moral principles; gallantly.  a great soldier who has fought nobly in many battles  she nobly sacrificed her love to allow him to marry Margaret  Example sentencesExamples -  He knew that they had died nobly, and for that he was proud.
 -  Nobly, he strove during his short time as emperor to bring about a negotiated peace between the warring powers.
 -  Although not agreeing with my modernist convictions he stood by me, nobly true to friendship.
 -  They fell doing their duty nobly, a death which they would have been the first to desire.
 -  He was a fine and imaginative architect who nobly championed humanity against its many twentieth-century enemies.
 -  They pressed bravely and nobly onward amid their trying circumstances.
 -  On my birthday, numerous friends nobly fulfilled this requirement.
 -  He nobly sacrificed his life in a vain attempt to save the rest of his team.
 -  I believe that you served our country nobly.
 -  He responded nobly to the challenge and took wonderful care of the family.
 -  The count was finally guillotined - he nobly turned himself in when the revolutionaries made a hostage of his lawyer.
 -  We suffer nobly, alone, because we do not want to spread our affliction.
 -  They nobly make a decision to risk their lives while trying to slay their friend's murderer.
 -  Seeing the wounded and unconscious Palamon and Arcite, who have fought nobly, he orders they should be tended but kept prisoner.
 -  "Captain, I am certain it was an accident," she replied nobly.
 -  If this age is to survive, it must follow the way of love and non-violence that he so nobly illustrated in his life.
 -  He is a great soldier who has fought nobly in many battles.
 
 - 2.1 In a grand or impressive manner.
 gigantic chairs with velvet padding were standing nobly on raised platforms  Example sentencesExamples -  Thirty of the Academy's nobly titled 'Academicians' will show a large selection of work for their annual Christmas exhibition.
 -  The family farm is spread nobly along the coast.
 -  Capitalism is co-opting social forces, such as surrealism, that once were nobly subversive.
 -  The buildings are nobly proportioned and remarkably detailed.
 -  My new plate sets off my cupboard very nobly.
 -  His voice was essentially lyrical, but he could raise it to nobly heroic heights.
 -  Formerly it was nobly built and constructed with strong walls, which have now been left to the ravages of age.
 -  As Imogene, she teases Bellini's nobly sculptured melodies mercilessly.
 -  Details were lovingly coloured while the grand sweep of the music was nobly maintained.
 -  In this scene Savenko really found his form and gave a nobly moving account of Glinka's music.
 -  That night they dine nobly again, with an excellent Madeira.
 -  This mood is most nobly and unmistakably expressed in the opening theme of the Prelude.
 
  
    Definition of nobly in US English: noblyadverbˈnōblē 1From a family of high rank.  the nobly born Ralph d'Escures  Example sentencesExamples -  Most of the nobly born have at one time or another sought to find progenitors among the Companions of the Conqueror.
 -  Griselda is obligated to pledge complete obedience to her nobly born husband.
 -  They wanted to live nobly, that is, they wanted to live without working.
 -  We are not royally born, but we're nobly born.
 -  A man does not deserve any praise or honour just for being nobly born.
 -  The proportion of nobly born spouses for peers' children reached an apex during this period.
 -  Margaret of Oingt was a nobly born French Carthusian nun.
 -  The Greeks' practice of having the nobly bred women engage in weaving appears to be economic in purpose.
 -  Being nobly born, we all had our own horses.
 -  The seigneurial system was intimately bound up with the ideal of living nobly: it was designed to let seigneurs consume what peasants produced.
 
 2In a way that shows fine personal qualities or high moral principles; gallantly.  a great soldier who has fought nobly in many battles  she nobly sacrificed her love to allow him to marry Margaret  Example sentencesExamples -  He responded nobly to the challenge and took wonderful care of the family.
 -  If this age is to survive, it must follow the way of love and non-violence that he so nobly illustrated in his life.
 -  We suffer nobly, alone, because we do not want to spread our affliction.
 -  On my birthday, numerous friends nobly fulfilled this requirement.
 -  He is a great soldier who has fought nobly in many battles.
 -  Although not agreeing with my modernist convictions he stood by me, nobly true to friendship.
 -  I believe that you served our country nobly.
 -  Nobly, he strove during his short time as emperor to bring about a negotiated peace between the warring powers.
 -  "Captain, I am certain it was an accident," she replied nobly.
 -  They fell doing their duty nobly, a death which they would have been the first to desire.
 -  He nobly sacrificed his life in a vain attempt to save the rest of his team.
 -  The count was finally guillotined - he nobly turned himself in when the revolutionaries made a hostage of his lawyer.
 -  They pressed bravely and nobly onward amid their trying circumstances.
 -  They nobly make a decision to risk their lives while trying to slay their friend's murderer.
 -  He was a fine and imaginative architect who nobly championed humanity against its many twentieth-century enemies.
 -  He knew that they had died nobly, and for that he was proud.
 -  Seeing the wounded and unconscious Palamon and Arcite, who have fought nobly, he orders they should be tended but kept prisoner.
 
 - 2.1 In a grand or impressive manner.
 gigantic chairs with velvet padding were standing nobly on raised platforms  Example sentencesExamples -  In this scene Savenko really found his form and gave a nobly moving account of Glinka's music.
 -  The buildings are nobly proportioned and remarkably detailed.
 -  That night they dine nobly again, with an excellent Madeira.
 -  The family farm is spread nobly along the coast.
 -  Capitalism is co-opting social forces, such as surrealism, that once were nobly subversive.
 -  His voice was essentially lyrical, but he could raise it to nobly heroic heights.
 -  Formerly it was nobly built and constructed with strong walls, which have now been left to the ravages of age.
 -  As Imogene, she teases Bellini's nobly sculptured melodies mercilessly.
 -  Details were lovingly coloured while the grand sweep of the music was nobly maintained.
 -  Thirty of the Academy's nobly titled 'Academicians' will show a large selection of work for their annual Christmas exhibition.
 -  My new plate sets off my cupboard very nobly.
 -  This mood is most nobly and unmistakably expressed in the opening theme of the Prelude.
 
  
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