adverb [usually ADVERB with verb, oft ADVERB adjective]
If you do something studiously, you do it carefully and deliberately.
When I looked at Clive, he studiously avoided my eyes.
Examples of 'studiously' in a sentence
studiously
Latterly he seemed to studiously avoid looking in for fear of what he might see.
Times, Sunday Times (2007)
His views were studiously ignored for both sides were now committed to a legal separation.
Amanda Mackenzie Stuart Consuelo & Alva: Love and Power in the Gilded Age (2005)
And as they did the nurses studiously ignored them.
The Sun (2012)
Up to now they have studiously refused to do so.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
She studiously ignored all our advice.
Louise Carpenter AN UNLIKELY COUNTESS: Lily Budge and the 13th Earl of Galloway (2004)
This is a picture of integrity, intelligence and empathy that studiously avoids cliché.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
The congress studiously avoided any mention of independence or disloyalty to the Crown.
Divine, Robert A. (editor) & Breen, T. H & Frederickson, George M & Williams, R. Hal America Past and Present (1995)
In fact, in all our work we studiously avoid any political stance.
The Sun (2006)
It is a piece of advice that Hollywood studiously ignores.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
Chefs all over London studiously ignored his contributions to cuisine.
Times, Sunday Times (2008)
He has studiously avoided partisanship.
Times, Sunday Times (2006)
In the early years, it was a piece of light entertainment that studiously ignored any of the cool youth revolutions happening around it.
Times, Sunday Times (2015)
His cries for help were then studiously ignored by 30 passers-by.
Times, Sunday Times (2006)
He demanded leadership from his front bench (who studiously ignored him).
Times, Sunday Times (2011)
Classical music and opera are as popular as pop, and visiting A-listers are studiously ignored.
Times, Sunday Times (2015)
Alpha Mum studiously ignores him.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
The trend persisted for fund managers, underweight in banks by and large, to hunt for good news from lenders and studiously avoid the bad.
Times, Sunday Times (2011)
The new regulations are being rushed through, and typically have wider implications that are being studiously ignored, despite attempts to get common sense to prevail.