[
US
/ˌænəˈɫɪtɪkɫi/
]
[ UK /ˌænɐlˈɪtɪkli/ ]
[ UK /ˌænɐlˈɪtɪkli/ ]
ADVERB
-
by virtue of analysis
assuming that the distinction is maintained one may ask which is to be analytically prior?
How To Use analytically In A Sentence
- Such a figure is literally and etymologically hysterical, as it is excessively feminized; it is also psychoanalytically hysterical.
- Although students may not be formally assessed upon the quality of their contributions, conscientious, responsive individuals and analytically minded students are noticed by tutors.
- Tests that measure children's ability to think analytically are being introduced in a number of schools.
- On the other hand, however, a curious variety of perfectibilist mysticism, often psychoanalytically tinged, has attracted some forceful adherents. PERFECTIBILITY OF MAN
- Finally according to the prediction model, the radio wave propagation loss performance in different conditions is analytically simulated.
- But to characterise this condition as synonymous with ‘deflation’ is analytically unsound.
- An optimal performance index is defined by desired closed loop transfer function and systematic design procedure is developed to derive the controller analytically.
- Although students may not be formally assessed upon the quality of their contributions, conscientious, responsive individuals and analytically minded students are noticed by tutors.
- In the sphere of concrete concepts too it is worth nothing that the German splits up the idea of killing into the basic concept of dead (tot) and the derivational one of causing to do (or be) so and so (by the method of vocalic change, töot -); the German töot-et (analytically tot-+ vowel change+-et) causes to be dead is, approximately, the formal equivalent of our dead-en-s, though the idiomatic application of this latter word is different311 Chapter 5. Form in Language: Grammatical Concepts
- A teacher can encourage children to think analytically.