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Newly

Newly is an English adverb that means recently or not long ago. It is used to indicate that a state, action, or event has started or occurred within a recent period. The word often appears before the adjective or participle it modifies, as in newly built, newly arrived, or newly discovered. It can also appear after an auxiliary verb, as in the house has been newly renovated.

In terms of word formation, newly is created by adding the adverbial suffix -ly to the adjective

Placement and usage notes: Newly typically precedes the word it modifies, but it can appear after a

See also: recently, lately, adjacent adverbs of time. In other languages, exact equivalents exist but may carry

new.
This
kind
of
derivation
is
common
in
English
and
yields
a
word
that
signals
recency
or
a
recent
change
of
state.
The
usage
of
newly
is
widespread
across
formal,
journalistic,
and
academic
writing,
though
it
can
carry
a
slightly
more
literary
or
emphatic
tone
than
the
synonym
recently.
form
of
be
or
another
auxiliary
verb
when
describing
a
completed
recent
change
(for
example,
"the
area
has
become
newly
industrialized").
It
is
less
common
in
everyday
speech
than
recently,
and
some
style
guides
recommend
recently
for
straightforward
statements,
reserving
newly
for
emphasis
or
a
sense
of
change.
different
connotations
regarding
immediacy
or
formality.