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Definition

To like, accept, or condone.

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In Context

  • "An English passenger, taking kindly to me, drew me into conversation. He was older than I. He asked me what I ate, what I was, where I was going, why I was shy, and so on. He also advised me to come to table. He laughed at my insistence on abjuring meat, […]"
  • "My correspondent, who was riding in the first coach, comments that the small standard tender did not take kindly to this gay progress, and signified its disapproval from time to time by bombarding the train with lumps of coal!"
  • "The host of business travellers between Bishops Stortford and London would scarcely take kindly to devious routing via the Southbury line; on the other hand, it is not desirable that they should overcrowd the business trains to and from Cambridge."
  • "It seemed to John like the sort of place where the people all knew one another, were likely to have guns for protection, and rarely took kindly to strangers."
  • "The young Darrow did not always take kindly to his father's strict ways. He was a disciplined student only when he liked what he was doing."