What's the difference between guiltily and guiltylike?
Guiltily
Definition:
(adv.) In a guilty manner.
Example Sentences:
(1) Nor do most of its users – as they check out the capital of Georgia or guiltily plagiarise the entry on Marx – ponder how this Eden is sustained in its spotless state of nature.
(2) I pop a sweet in my mouth and guiltily tell him I'm not offering him one.
(3) If you genuinely do distrust industrial production, if you do believe that a mass, mechanised civilisation is incompatible in some way with democracy, post-fossil fuel economy or a humane society in general – and such opinions are not rare – then you necessarily have to own up to the critique, something that the guiltily uneasy combination of hay bales and laptops found at many protest camps can make especially uncomfortable.
(4) In researching the piece, the chief curator, Peta Motture, found that her predecessor John Charles Robinson, the first curator of the V&A, guiltily described bringing the piece to South Kensington as "a page torn out of history".
(5) But for this year at least, our kids will celebrate two Christmases, that modern ritual disingenuously and guiltily sold to children as a treat, when in fact it's often the only tolerable way for separated parents to cope.
(6) I’m encouraging them all.” I tell him he is a terrible liar and he reddens even deeper and laughs guiltily.
(7) Guiltily, we have often laughed at his constant refrain of "What?!"
(8) You start guiltily retracing your steps back to the last budget manicure you paid for in an innocent-looking salon in London, Portsmouth, Glasgow, or Newcastle (all cities with nail bars that have been fined in recent years for "employing" illegal Vietnamese workers, say the Sunday Times).
(9) I’m guiltily drawn to pictures of him, as if he’s boobs.
(10) Though the Nuremberg tribunal described aggression as "the supreme international crime", several powerful states guiltily resisted its adoption.