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Dilatorily

   Also found in: Legal 0.01 sec.
dil·a·to·ry  (dl-tôr, -tr)
adj.
1. Intended to delay.
2. Tending to postpone or delay: dilatory in his work habits. See Synonyms at slow.

[Middle English dilatorie, from Latin dltrius, from dltor, delayer, from dltus, past participle of differre, to delay : d-, dis-, apart; see dis- + ltus, carried; see tel- in Indo-European roots.]

dila·tori·ly adv.
dila·tori·ness n.


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It was not intended dilatorily or as mockery or condescension.
Congenitally lazy, but with spurts of industry, Johnson, in a sentence that slyly suggests his stop-and-go efforts, recorded: "I finished the lives of the Poets, which I wrote in my usual way, dilatorily and hastily, unwilling to work, and working with vigour, and haste.
 
 
 
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