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beloved
When used as an adjective, "beloved" often sounds more formal or poetic than the word "loved." In some contexts, especially in religious speeches or wedding ceremonies, it is used to address a group of people (e.g., "Dearly beloved"). As a noun, it is usually preceded by a possessive word like "my," "his," or "her" to indicate who the person is loved by.
💬Casual Conversation
🎬Tuesday afternoon, Victoria is reviewing a draft of David's proposed company newsletter.
Victoria
Why did you refer to the legacy software as our "beloved system"? Cut the fluff.
David
Just trying to soften the blow before we sunset it. My bad.
💡
Victoria is criticizing David's use of 'beloved' as an inappropriately emotional adjective for a piece of software. David uses the phrasal verb 'soften the blow' (to make bad news easier to accept) and the slang 'my bad' (admitting a mistake) to respond to her blunt correction.
Meanings
adjective
Dearly loved; greatly loved.
"She read a letter from her beloved husband."