presently
[ prez-uhnt-lee ]
/ ˈprɛz ənt li /
adverb
in a little while; soon: They will be here presently.
at the present time; now: He is presently out of the country.
Archaic.
immediately.
usage note for presently
The two apparently contradictory meanings of
presently, “in a little while, soon” and “at the present time, now,” are both old in the language. In the latter meaning
presently dates back to the 15th century. It is currently in standard use in all varieties of speech and writing in both Great Britain and the United States. The sense “soon” arose gradually during the 16th century. Strangely, it is the older sense “now” that is sometimes objected to by usage guides. The two senses are rarely if ever confused in actual practice.
Presently meaning “now” is most often used with the present tense (
The professor is presently on sabbatical leave ) and
presently meaning “soon” often with the future tense (
The supervisor will be back presently ). The semantic development of
presently parallels that of
anon, which first had the meaning, now archaic, of “at once, immediately,” but later came to mean “soon.”
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH presently
currently immediately momentarily now presently soon (see synonym study at immediately) (see usage note at the current entry)Words nearby presently
presenter,
presentient,
presentiment,
presentist,
presentive,
presently,
presentment,
presents,
preservationist,
preservative,
preserve
Example sentences from the Web for presently
British Dictionary definitions for presently
presently
/ (ˈprɛzəntlɪ) /