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chronological

[ UK /kɹˌɒnəlˈɒd‍ʒɪkə‍l/ ]
[ US /ˌkɹɑnəˈɫɑdʒɪkəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. relating to or arranged according to temporal order
    chronological age

How To Use chronological In A Sentence

  • It is important not to confuse the sociological meaning of age with the notion of chronological age, the length of time a person has been alive. Sociology
  • Report provides a chronological account of Mexican military involvement in disbanding student protests in Mexico City during the week of July 29. Tlatelolco massacre - the secret archives
  • Conversely, the extrinsic properties of artifacts can provide chronological information that seriation cannot.
  • The poems come to us across a great chronological and cultural divide, and the reader is reminded of this fact by the occasional archaic word and by the unusual compounding, both of which impart a faintly disorienting tone.
  • Here is a rough chronological list of the members of the Dialectical school.
  • Similarly, if we operate in reverse chronological order (i.e. from t=4 to t=1), the left shift will result in a multiplication by two.
  • Moore's approach is chronological with interpretation of important events and personalities based upon her study of the Zambelli records.
  • Much effort went into the establishment of regional chronological systems, and the description of the development of culture in each area.
  • He generally relates the story in chronological fashion, but, like many storytellers, he often stops to present tangential information about a new character or situation.
  • The remaining six groups clustered approximately in chronological order.
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