conventionally
IPA: kʌnvˈɛnʃʌnʌɫi
adverb
- Ordinarily, by convention. See other synonyms at Thesaurus:usually
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Examples of "conventionally" in Sentences
- Brisk has no yeshivas in the conventionally understood sense.
- The conductors of the pairs are conventionally interconnected.
- The brakes are mounted conventionally on the rudder pedal toes.
- Conventionally, April 1886 marks the end of the Tonkin campaign.
- The control sticks are located conventionally in front of each seat.
- The designation is conventionally taken from the date when it began.
- In medicine, the sensitivity and specificity are conventionally used.
- The river was not conventionally navigable upstream of the Town Bridge.
- Theatre is conventionally used to describe the milieu of live performance.
- What a label conventionally refers to can never be identical with its basis for labeling.
- For instance, sometimes amongst fat lesbian friends there will be discussion of thin conventionally attractive women and
- A term conventionally used to designate a "Popish Plot" which, during the reign of Charles II of England, Titus Oates pretended to have discovered.
- In other words, truly established existence is existence established independently of being what a word, concept, or mental label conventionally refers to.
- Sure I shudder at the price of organic fruit most days but at least I have the choice to shop elsewhere if eating conventionally is better than having no fruit at all.
- Secondly, the accessibility and popularity of blogs means that blog posts are almost certainly read by more people than are anything within conventionally published media.
- “The 1948 Generation,” a term conventionally used to frame the Israeli artistic creation of the decade between 1945 – 1955, responded to the declaration of the State of Israel and the ensuing war with works of art whose main theme is sacrifice, generally featuring male figures.