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systematically

[ US /ˌsɪstəˈmætɪkɫi/ ]
[ UK /sˌɪstəmˈætɪkli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a systematic or consistent manner
    they systematically excluded women

How To Use systematically In A Sentence

  • For the floors above, we can use temporary airsealing floor by floor, and portable equipment; when we have things atmosphered and lighted and heated, you and Martha and Tony Lattimer can go to work systematically and in comfort, and I'll give you all the help I can spare from the other work. Omnilingual
  • Systematically consider each standard and its requirements.
  • Philosophy Philosophy deals systematically with questions that every reflective person asks from time to time.
  • We have thus been thoroughly and systematically dehumanized. Between Worlds: A Reader, Rhetoric and Handbook
  • It should systematically unify and organize a set of observations, building from basic principles.
  • Huxley's interest in these great problems appears and reappears throughout his published writings, but his views are most clearly and systematically exposed in his "Romanes" lecture on "Evolution and Thomas Henry Huxley; A Sketch Of His Life And Work
  • Methods of predicting machine life has systematically summarized with the emphasis on those which use theoretical analysis to substitute large scale prototype experiments.
  • Their name, which he had long avoided mentioning, was incessantly on his lips: but always the same, always inclined naturally and systematically, to have more strings than one to his bow, he appeared to incline alternately _for the younger branch, and for the reigning branch_. Memoirs of the Private Life, Return, and Reign of Napoleon in 1815, Vol. II
  • And one would expect, therefore, that a progressive and systematically thoughtful government would move heaven and earth to rescue the nation from the carnage which AIDS is taking, and unhappily, that is not the case, although in every other country in southern Africa I have visited, they are moving heaven and earth to turn things around. CNN Transcript Sep 9, 2006
  • Only in recent decades have prosimians - a suborder of primates that includes lemurs, lorises, bushbabies, and tarsiers - begun to be studied systematically.
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