| EXULTANTLY | • exultantly adv. In an exultant manner. • EXULTANT adv. exulting. |
| LATERALITY | • laterality n. The state or quality of being lateral. • LATERALITY n. the state or condition of being lateral. |
| LITERALITY | • literality n. The condition of being literal. • LITERALITY n. the quality of being literal. |
| LITERATELY | • literately adv. In the way of one who is literate. • LITERATE adv. able to read and write. |
| PETULANTLY | • petulantly adv. In a petulant manner. • PETULANT adv. peevish. |
| SLATTERNLY | • slatternly adj. Appropriate to or characteristic of a slattern. • slatternly adv. In a slatternly manner. • SLATTERNLY adj. like a slattern. |
| STEALTHILY | • stealthily adv. In a stealthy manner, furtively. • STEALTHY adv. acting with stealth, furtive. |
| STELLATELY | • STELLATE adv. star-shaped; starry, also STELLATED. |
| STYLOLITES | • stylolites n. Plural of stylolite. • STYLOLITE n. an irregular suture-like boundary creating columnar formations in some limestones and evaporites. |
| TACTLESSLY | • tactlessly adv. In a tactless manner; in a manner intentionally inconsiderate of another’s feelings. • TACTLESS adv. without tact. |
| TASTEFULLY | • tastefully adv. In a tasteful manner. • TASTEFUL adv. full of taste. |
| TEETOTALLY | • teetotally adv. Very completely, very totally. • TEETOTAL adv. abstaining from alcohol. |
| TEMULENTLY | • temulently adv. In a temulent manner. • TEMULENT adv. pertaining to temulence. |
| TEXTURALLY | • texturally adv. In a textural manner, relating to texture. • TEXTURAL adv. pertaining to the surface characteristics of something. |
| THETICALLY | • thetically adv. In a thetic or thetical manner; as or like a thesis. • THETICAL adv. positively asserting, bearing the thesis, also THETIC. |
| TOLERANTLY | • tolerantly adv. In a tolerant manner. • tolerantly adv. With tolerance. • TOLERANT adv. inclined to tolerate. |
| ULTIMATELY | • ultimately adv. Indicating the last item. • ultimately adv. Indicating the most important action. • ultimately adv. (Linguistics) Used to indicate the etymon at which a given etymological derivation terminates. |