How To Use Naively In A Sentence

  • In short, Knox's proposal was ill conceived and naively made.
  • We naively thought that by ionizing the ultracold atoms in our trap, we would be running the CERN process in reverse.
  • I declared myself a supporter of women's lib at the age of nine and naïvely rejoiced at the introduction of a female prime minister.
  • _What practical difference ought it to make if_, instead of saying naively that 'I' am active now in delivering this address, I say that _a wider thinker is active_, or that _certain ideas are active_, or that _certain nerve-cells are active_, in producing the result? A Pluralistic Universe Hibbert Lectures at Manchester College on the Present Situation in Philosophy
  • We found that nature behaves different than what we - perhaps naively - expected.
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  • Statistics are used naively at best: the datum that gunpoint robberies rose 53 percent between April and November of 2001 is almost certainly a random fluctuation and not by itself useful to the argument.
  • They were young, well-educated, altruistic; Stephanie found their idealism naively evangelical. CHAMELEON
  • There used to be something naively passionate about the band, an endearing geekiness that made it hard not be swept away by the momentum.
  • If you are operating at first order, the vanilla type of PDFs naively tell you what the probability of finding a quark or gluon of a certain type and certain longitudinal momentum is. Generalized PDFs Imply a Gravitomagnetic Moment!?!?!? « Imaginary Potential
  • By working less and staying at home more, I believed naively that my husband would come home to domestic bliss and a happy marriage would ensue.
  • So on that naively optimistic note: Here's to many more decades!
  • They naively assume things can only get better.
  • The style is direct, almost naively simple.
  • Problems arise, however, when it is used, naively and unreflectingly, to apply to physical bodies: we naively suppose the experiential quality to be an intrinsic quality of the physical object.
  • Sir William Wallace gave "a heavy sword encased in a brass scabbard," and naively explaining which Sir William Wallace it was, lest we get the wrong one by the hassock; this is the one "from whose patriotism and bravery comes that heart-stirring air, 'Scots wha hae wi' Wallace bled. ' Christian Science
  • Naively, I thought we had walked into a debs' ball when we arrived into a sea of gorgeous young girls in evening gowns.
  • To his unfeigned astonishment the questions were answered promptly, simply, and decisively, and when the interview was ended my companion naively expressed his wonderment.
  • That takes us back to many arguments that were already canvassed during the early select committee process on the previous bill, which I naively thought had been resolved.
  • It is, in fact, impossible for us moderns, educated in a long literary tradition, to live our lives as naturally and naïvely as the unlettered of to-day, or the people of the preliterary geological epoch. Without Prejudice
  • This year's rising darlings Coldplay make sincere, earnest music, but appear almost naively accessible and unpretentious by comparison.
  • What's more, the prose - a comma-studded pileup of naïvely poetic sentence fragments - is so elaborately loose that it must be counterfeit.
  • And I would listen politely, almost naively, which is interviewers 'technique, and you get more information that way. Bad Boy: The Life and Politics of Lee Atwater
  • The White-headed Conundrum," or "No Sarvey" -- an expression naively supposed to suggest to quick intelligences the Spanish _quien sabe_. The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce — Volume 2: In the Midst of Life: Tales of Soldiers and Civilians
  • Stan ZetieStreetly, West Midlands• Nick Clegg allowed David Cameron to fix constituency boundaries for a Tory victory next time, and the AV referendum he naively accepted in return is now being steamrollered by Tory money, Tory newspapers and a Tory front organisation. Letters: The case for AV – and alternative policies
  • *** And West Bank settlements are among the most profoundly mis-reported (naively and more mendaciously) and misconceived issues within the overall Israel/Arab Muslim set of issues in the Middle East and on the planet in general, in terms of strategic and other practicalities (e.g., defensible borders), in terms of international law, and in terms of history in general, both prior to and since 1948. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • Then, as naively as if he were a bagman selling rubbish to a fool, Chullunder unfolded his proposal to the gravely nodding woman.
  • Interestingly, we are not offered a naively romantic picture of her mother's success.
  • The Ospreys struggled to secure quality first-phase possession, naively throwing long at the lineout, which often yielded possession back to the enthusiastic Blues.
  • The first is the Bible's admonition to those who naïvely presume that it is their simple human right to live on this hallowed ground.
  • He says he naively suggested a meeting to address the peafowl issue last year. Peacocks Are an Acquired Taste Some in California Don't Share
  • Maybe they naively believe that disputes among allies will quickly evaporate.
  • This war is called criminalisation and its perpetrators are governments we naively looked to to protect our rights. Open Democracy News Analysis - Comments
  • I also naively assumed that the schedules would help instructors plan classes for the various age groups.
  • he believed, naively, that she would leave him her money
  • Animal Farm emerged from and has generated political controversy, but it has also sometimes been naively misjudged as unpolitical.
  • Kevin naively asks her at the beginning of their relationship to type a manuscript for him.
  • I knew the answer to this naively stupid question.
  • He recalls naively thinking: "Great, I can donate every year then". Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Although he did not "authorise" the book, he gave several interviews for it and answered - perhaps naively - the question about his Oxford contemporary's death. Archbishop's New Statesman magazine interview
  • Having extended such a gesture, 'naively'as a First Lady she was used as propaganda. John Edwards Doesn't Exist. Why? Because He Just Doesn't.
  • She rejected it at first, thinking naively she could continue being a political journalist until she heard the whole nation cackle with laughter. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thus they would not have mindlessly and naively misjudged the imperialist treaty diplomacy of the Soviet Union, quondam ally of Nazi Germany.
  • Rather naively, I ventured the proposition that he might be a little tipsy. Times, Sunday Times
  • To the naively ignorant, the English words "Peter" and "rock" are so different that it's obvious that Jesus was referring to the faith Simon Peter received as a gift from the Father. Latest Articles
  • Economists generally take for granted, if only tacitly, a teleological view of money's historical development, according to which it first takes the "primitive" form of mundane commodities such as cowrie shells and cacao seeds, and then advances through various stages, culminating in the national fiat monies most economies rely upon today. offers a spirited rebuttal to this naively "whiggish" perspective. EconLog
  • Is that not being naively ambitious given the slow machinery of bureaucracy?
  • Hannes: You can't naively quantize gravity that is true. World-wide Campaign Sheds New Light on Nature's "LHC" | Universe Today
  • She was astonished -- she was touched to the heart, by what she called naively the conversion of Jacqueline. The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • They were young, well-educated, altruistic; Stephanie found their idealism naively evangelical. CHAMELEON
  • The original novel caught the ingenuous babble of its protagonist, naively recording the happy circumstances of her household as her master closed in on her.
  • He tells his naively unbelieving sister which her father "gives his potent regiment to a trull. Philadelphia Reflections: Shakspere Society of Philadelphia
  • She rejected it at first, thinking naively she could continue being a political journalist until she heard the whole nation cackle with laughter. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'd heard of payola as I entered the music business professionally in the mid seventies, but naïvely thought it would never apply to me.
  • They were young, well-educated, altruistic; Stephanie found their idealism naively evangelical. CHAMELEON
  • We also discover that Terry, whose wife absconded with his best man, has turned for clandestine consolation to a naively trusting shopgirl, Nuala, and a dance-loving hairdresser, Breda.
  • Back home, we started in on the jiaozi, which I had naively thought would be the easiest dish to make. Taking on the Local Cuisine
  • If we theorize culture without considering the dynamics of fear or emotions, we naively underestimate the potential for social change.
  • Maybe that is just my experience; perhaps much of the country is repressed and I am naively unaware.
  • Contemporary Christian music may be lame and uninspiring, but the answer is not to be found in longing, naively and uncritically, for mainstream success.
  • Politically he was naïvely ambitious and factious; he owes the epithet ‘Good’ only to his patronage of men of letters, including Lydgate and Capgrave.
  • As a native of the area around Mobile, Alabama, a place long ridiculed by many as the nation's stepchild, it amused me that what was disdained as a redneck corner of the universe populated by ignorant and racist whites and besieged blacks became the "sunbelt" in the 1970s and as soon as those "cheeseheads" arrived in "crackerland" with no more need for their snowtires and discovered giant flying cockroaches and mildew among other horrors and complained mightily about the tropics they had naively sought, they became disenchanted. Lake Level Sucks 11-19-05
  • I went to the most sophisticated game, baccarat, and naively asked the burly pit boss what were the odds of winning at this game.
  • Professor Ian Stewart, Warwick University maths professor and occasional Telegraph contributor, points out: Reindeer have a curious arrangement of gadgetry on top of their heads which we call antlers and naively assume exist for the males to do battle and to win females. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • When people decide to undertake an initiative, they naively think that all they have to do is go out and collect the requisite number of signatures and then presto you're on the ballot-wrong.
  • Is it naively idealistic to imagine a British prime minister taking on such a Herculean burden?
  • She rejected it at first, thinking naively she could continue being a political journalist until she heard the whole nation cackle with laughter. Times, Sunday Times
  • And yes, he was - but like all misanthropes he was only so because he believed (almost naively) in mankind, and was continually disappointed.
  • The 40th anniversary of the Normandy landings and of V-E and V-J days had filled the air with encomiums to our long-lost martial splendor, and I naively felt bad that B. Bunny had to serve in the debased, modern Marine Corps. Getting Their Guns Off
  • People should grow up, accept it, enjoy the sport for what it is and not naively idealise it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Once alighted, we naively succumbed to the temptation of leaning over the railway bridge at Haworth and got a well-deserved faceful of sooty filth along with many others.
  • I, perhaps naively, believed he was telling the truth.
  • Some people would have been naively hopeful that something of the truth would emerge from this.
  • In many cases this obscurity is well-deserved; many early works are mediocre, naïvely imitative stuff, unworthy to stand in the canon with Seymour, Walcott, Selvon, Naipaul or Lamming.
  • They were young, well-educated, altruistic; Stephanie found their idealism naively evangelical. CHAMELEON
  • But I'd naively failed to notice that at least three members of the seminar were mature students.
  • In a 1928 article, it was naively if ingeniously described as ‘Washington's Traveling Boot Box’ with a removable lid that ‘is transformed into an effective bootjack.’
  • Yet for two weeks, many of us continued to "naively" believe in these brave, young Egyptians. Kristen Breitweiser: Rooting for Egypt
  • Unless we are to believe naively that leisure and luxury crystallize out of thin air, we must recognize and acknowledge that the comforts of globalization are reaped from the labour and toil of others.
  • Naively optimistic and resilient, Manet sought honours in the Salons; Degas was cynically indifferent to public acclaim.
  • They had been dunning me for a £10 bill I had naively thought I would leave to the next serious accounting.
  • It has been called blasphemous; it is not intentionally blasphemous; as I have said, Oscar always put himself quite naively in the place of any historical character. Oscar Wilde
  • Personally, and you can call me naively optimistic, but I'm disappointed he made it back into his "pigsty" of a constituency. The grannie's on...
  • Naively, we might imagine that the variation and relative inexactness of our measurements will become pronounced and obtrusive the more refined and microscopic are our measurement tools and procedures. Nobody Knows Nothing
  • They naively believe that their words do not influence others, but I have read the following sentence on an online diary: ‘I think I might cut up my gums so it hurts to eat so I won't want to; I saw that on a pro-ana site.’
  • Those of you who might naively imagine that vitriolic historical disputation is a transient phenomenon of Australian academe should think again.
  • It was often the term applied to bizarrerie -- it was fashionable to draw naïvely, as it was called. Adventures in the Arts Informal Chapters on Painters, Vaudeville, and Poets
  • By working less and staying at home more, I believed naively that my husband would come home to domestic bliss and a happy marriage would ensue.

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