Get Free Checker

genealogically

ADVERB
  1. in a genealogical manner
    he charted his family tree genealogically

How To Use genealogically In A Sentence

  • “So, in what way precisely was Wordsworth a—let me get this right—genealogically confused, de-individualized, empirico-transcendental pedagogue?” The Redleys
  • Witte's life is traced from his childhood in the Caucasian borderlands of the empire as the son of a midlevel Russian functionary and the maternal grandson of a prominent and genealogically well-connected imperial family. A Statesman For the Czar
  • There is one other part of the cell where genealogically significant material is located: mitochondrial DNA, or mtDNA. Shaking the Family Tree
  • All of them are longer unembarrassed sacramento california homes for sale, men with meconopsis who hematocolpos genealogically the attributable they pyjama to see cannister and seediness henceforth deprecatively. Rational Review
  • What Theobald did not assume, however, was how far back these processes go in linking organisms genealogically. Darwin’s Theory of Universal Common Ancestry Confirmed in First Large-Scale Test | Impact Lab
  • Friendship and other connections are very important, and many people who are referred to by kin terms are not genealogically related.
  • The New Leipzig School is genealogically interwoven with the old one and shaped by a tradition of perfected craftsmanship.
  • The key element in this dynamic is innovation-sharing, an evolutionary protocol whereby descent with variation from one “generation” to the next is not genealogically traceable but is a descent of a cellular community as a whole. A Disclaimer for Behe?
  • Although Pamela is the most genealogically minded member of her family, the Dudleys and Underhills do the sorts of things that make genealogists happy—and envious. Shaking the Family Tree
  • Professor Heer has not ventured to identify any of this vast assemblage of Miocene plants and insects with living species, so far at least as to assign to them the same specific names, but he presents us with a list of what he terms homologous forms, which are so like the living ones that he supposes the one to have been derived genealogically from the others. The Antiquity of Man
View all