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day-by-day

[ US /ˈdeɪbaɪˌdeɪ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or belonging to or occurring every day
    daily routine
    a daily paper

How To Use day-by-day In A Sentence

  • The creatures starts to vanish from the Earth, nature temperament also pejoration day-by-day.
  • Ask a born-again person about his or her faith and they will probably mention their experience of the indwelling Christ and how important that is to them on a day-by-day basis.
  • Day-by-day, elite cyber criminals, like the Coreflood Gang, and brilliant hackers such s A-Z are getting stealthier and craftier at busting into corporate systems. Tough job for new security CEO
  • Now a testament to the broad-minded nature of today's canvas-dwelling youth or evidence of the deep divides that separate music fans, the event compiles performers into day-by-day categories: hard rockers, tried and tested indie heavyweights and People's Choice favourites, bills which alternate between Reading and its sister venture in West Yorkshire. This week's new live music
  • For anyone who wasn't alive or politically aware during the Reagan years and has any curiosity about them, I wrote a book in 1989 that conveys, on a day-by-day basis, what it was surreally like. Paul Slansky: Spoiler Alert! I Was Not a Reagan Fan
  • The news producers are getting antsier against the aggregators day-by-day, and who else but Rupert Murdoch to lead the charge. PaidContent
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