[
US
/ɪksˈpɫɪsətɫi/
]
[ UK /ɛksplˈɪsɪtli/ ]
[ UK /ɛksplˈɪsɪtli/ ]
ADVERB
-
in an explicit manner
in his foreword Professor Clark puts it explicitly
How To Use explicitly In A Sentence
- All forms of classical orthodoxy either explicitly reject or reject in principle kenotic theology.
- The Ahmadiyah were explicitly "warned and ordered" that "as long as they consider themselves to hold to Islam, to discontinue the promulgation of interpretations and activities that are deviant from the principal teachings of Islam, that is to say the promulgation of beliefs that recognize a prophet with all his teachings who comes after the Prophet Muhammad SAW. The Heritage Foundation Papers
- The same mythologem is also active in Dylan's opus, where - with the inclusion of the deepest part of the psyche - came to the repetition and extension of the transformation process, explicitly expressed in Dylan's song "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" from 1966: Expecting Rain
- Indeed, the definition of a financial audit explicitly includes examination of systems of internal control whereas the commercial audit does not.
- If, through their labors to transform misava into masimu, women established traditional tenure rights not explicitly recognized by patriliny, then likewise, through the everyday habits of farming, women learned, performed, and nurtured relationships that overlapped with, but ranged far beyond, blood - and marriage-based patrilineal kinship. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
- Neither does he explicitly assert that our natural beliefs are true.
- While both deontologists and rule - utilitarians are rule-followers, deontology explicitly stresses duty and intention rather than outcome, whereas the ultimate focus of rule-utilitarianism is on consequences.
- In the syllabus, the instructor must define explicitly SL for students and explain to them how course activities integrate into the SL project.
- Heidegger turns explicitly to the question of what is involved in existing authentically.
- As these three examples demonstrate, the "one-China principle" has been used by the PRC as a means of waging its "legal warfare" to incorporate Taiwan and to accomplish its bottom-line goal of de jure unification, as explicitly stated by its declared intent to use military force if necessary under the "anti-secession law" of 2005 to "reunify" Taiwan. Jamestown Foundation: All Publications