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regretfully

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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    From regretful + -ly.

    Pronunciation

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    • Audio:(file)

    Adverb

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    regretfully (comparative more regretfully, superlative most regretfully)

    1. In a regretful manner, with regret.
      • 1922, Agatha Christie, “Chapter 17”, in The Secret Adversary:
        The steak and chips partaken of for lunch seemed now to belong to another decade. He regretfully recognized the fact that he would not make a success of a hunger strike.
      • 1944 November and December, A Former Pupil, “Some Memories of Crewe Works—II”, in Railway Magazine, page 343:
        So after learning a great deal about iron founding and much more about pike fishing, one regretfully took leave of a shop full of kindly characters and proceeded to a worse lot of odours in the brass foundry.
      • 2009 July 22, Josie Litton, Come Back to Me: A Novel (Viking & Saxon)‎[1], Random House Publishing Group, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 102:
        To that end he had sent his men among the common folk of the town, from whom came a litany of tales that led Hawk to a stunningly wrong conclusion. "It seems I may not be good enough at listening," he said regretfully.
    2. (proscribed) Unfortunately, in a manner inspiring or deserving regret; used only as a sentence adverb (to introduce and modify an entire sentence).

    Usage notes

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    In careful usage, regretfully means with regret (in a manner expressed with regret, expressing remorse), while regrettably means deserving regret (sadly, unfortunately), and in the body of sentences this distinction is observed:[1] John regretfully asked for forgiveness, not *John regrettably asked for forgiveness, and The weather was regrettably terrible, not *The weather was regretfully terrible. These terms are occasionally conflated, a practice noted and decried since Fowler 1926 (in the forms regretful and regrettable).[2]

    However, in use as a sentence adverb, these are sometimes used interchangeably to mean “unfortunately”,[1] a practice noted since the 1960s in the United States,[2] as in: Regrettably, it is raining or Regretfully, it is raining, the latter being proscribed by some. This is similar to and possibly influenced by the use of hopefully,[2] which predates this usage of regretfully, and is both far more popular than regretfully and has no precise equivalent, *hopeably not existing.

    Synonyms

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    Derived terms

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    Translations

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    References

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    1. 1.0 1.1 regrettably/regretfully, Paul Brians, Common Errors in English Usage
    2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Merriam-Webster's dictionary of English usage, 1994, →ISBN, p. 808