justly
/ˈdʒʌstli/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈdʒʌstli/ (ame, ipa)
justly — 副詞
1. treating people fairly and following what is morally right, so that nobody can r
公正地
以符合道義的公平方式
treating people fairly and following what is morally right, so that nobody can reasonably complain about the outcome.
The committee acted justly when they returned the stolen paintings to Ada's grandmother.
委員會公正地將被竊的畫作歸還給 Ada 的祖母。
verb + justly: act / decide / rule justly
Many villagers feel that the new mayor has governed justly during the drought.
許多村民認為新任市長在乾旱期間執政公正。
Linh was justly proud of finishing the marathon only six weeks after her knee surgery.
Linh 在膝蓋手術後僅六週就跑完馬拉松,理當為此感到自豪。
Workers protested because the overtime pay had not been distributed justly across the night shift.
工人們抗議,因為夜班的加班費並未公平地分配。
The old village elder was justly admired for settling quarrels without taking sides.
那位年長的村中長老因排解紛爭時不偏袒任何一方,理應受到敬重。
- fairly
more everyday; 'fairly' covers any even-handed treatment, while 'justly' adds a stronger moral weight.
- rightly
focuses on correctness of judgment ('rightly believed'); 'justly' focuses on moral fairness of action.
- equitably
formal; emphasises equal share or balance, especially of resources or burdens, more than the moral-rightness side of 'justly'.
- deservedly
describes earned outcomes ('deservedly won'); overlaps with 'justly' before past participles like 'famous' or 'praised'.
文法句型
verb + justly
justly + past participle
用法筆記
Frequently pairs with verbs of judgment, governance, and reward (act, rule, decide, govern, treat, reward, punish) or with past participles describing reputation (justly famous, justly proud, justly accused). Often carries an evaluative tone — the speaker endorses the fairness of what is described.