[
UK
/bɹˈɔːdli/
]
[ US /ˈbɹɔdɫi/ ]
[ US /ˈbɹɔdɫi/ ]
ADVERB
-
in a wide fashion
he smiled broadly -
without regard to specific details or exceptions
he interprets the law broadly
How To Use broadly In A Sentence
- While several agents are available, activated charcoal is the most broadly effective adsorbent.
- Faustman’s approach offered a distinct advantage over much of the current treatment in autoimmunity, which is usually more broadly immunosuppressive—meaning it tinkers with all T cells or all B cells in order to try to keep the autoimmune reaction from occurring. The Autoimmune Epidemic
- The framework of the balanced constitution and mixed government was broadly accepted by political theorists and practising politicians alike. Democracy and its Critics - Anglo-American democratic thought in the nineteenth century
- The geographical results were fruitful; the Ross Sea, the Admiralty Range and the Great Ice Barrier were discovered and some eight hundred miles of Antarctic coastline were broadly delineated. The Home of the Blizzard Being the Story of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, 1911-1914
- The Largo is done broadly and is less nostalgic than tragic; some suspect intonation from the wind choir reduces the music's power somewhat.
- And it broadly defines these extremists as including people who embrace some components of "anticapitalist" or "antiglobalization" ideas. Us Too
- Wall painting can be broadly defined as any painting in which the support is the structure itself - whether a free-standing building, a subterranean tomb, or a rock-cut cave.
- In our time it is broadly true that political writing is bad writing. Exploring language (6th edn)
- Both factions have broadly agreed that the UN plan is a possible basis for negotiation.
- The Far East is broadly speaking a tropical and sub-tropical world.