Adverb
disarmingly (comparative more disarmingly, superlative most disarmingly)
In a disarming manner.
The strong appearance of design [in nature] allows a disarmingly simple argument: if it looks, walks and quacks like a duck, then, absent compelling evidence to the contrary, we have warrant to conclude it's a duck. Design should not be overlooked simply because it's so obvious. Michael Behe
Milla shows everyone in her orbit—her parents, Moses, a sensitive music teacher, a budding child violinist, and a disarmingly honest pregnant neighbour—how to live like you have nothing to lose. Source: Internet
Like so many of the stars of that pop masterpiece, Bell and costar (disarmingly good here) are alums of LA’s Groundlings Theater. Source: Internet
Calling forth Rogers today — and that plain, tender and disarmingly straightforward voice — is both a reminder of the mammoth loss (he died in 2003) and how sadly bereft we are of anything like him. Source: Internet
Select magazine's David Cavanagh believed the album lacks artifice and is "disarmingly genuine". Source: Internet
Praising it as "a finale to be proud of," Riley notes that "Sugar Baby" is "built on a disarmingly simple riff that turns foreboding." Source: Internet