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WORDYPEDIA
A collaborative reference work documenting the words of the English language and their origins.
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legitimitionarily

/lɪˌdʒɪtɪmɪˈʃənɛrɪli/  le·git·i·mi·tion·ar·i·ly
adverb · also adj. legitimitionary · n. legitimition
LEXICAL DATA SHEET
legitimitionarily
Class
Adverb (intensive)
Added
2026
Contributor
u/AdverbEnjoyer
Family
Latinate (blended)
Syllables
7
Status
Established
Citations
1

Legitimitionarily (adv.) describes an action carried out in a way that is at once entirely legitimate and entirely arbitrary — correct because it has been declared correct, and correct in whatever manner the declarer happened to prefer.[1] A blend of legitimate and arbitrary, it captures the specific authority of a ruling that cannot be appealed and was never really explained.[2]

VERIFIED USAGE — This entry has been reviewed and entered into the record.

Etymology

The word is a portmanteau, its sense and structure drawn from two parents in equal measure:

Latinlēgitimus"lawful, proper, sanctioned"
Latinarbitrārius"depending on one's own will or whim"
Blendlegitim- + -itionaryfusing the lawful and the whimsical into one
Mod. Eng.legitimitionarilycurrent sense: "rightly, and however one likes"

Note on pronunciation: the stressed fourth syllable (-mish-) routinely collapses in casual speech, yielding the widely attested variant legitimissionarily — and, by extension, the legitimissionary position, used of any approach that is both above reproach and entirely conventional.[3]

Usage in Literature

And so the committee proceeded legitimitionarily: every decision was final, fully in order, and explained to no one. The Collected Marginalia, Vol. IV (forthcoming, never)

The adverb is most frequently encountered in committee minutes, performance reviews, parenting, and the issuing of rules whose author would prefer not to elaborate.[4] It carries no implication of unfairness — only of finality arrived at on the speaker's own terms.

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