universally
IPA: junʌvˈɝsʌɫi
adverb
- In a universal manner.
- By everyone or by the vast majority of people.
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Examples of "universally" in Sentences
- However, the emendation is not universally accepted.
- The view expressed in the story is not universally accepted.
- A phrase universally known was “gandy dancer,” for a track laborer.
- Fiducial inference attracted controversy and was never universally accepted.
- The attribution of SNAFU to the American military is not universally accepted.
- The story of Momus is nearly universally accepted as the origin of the parade.
- a circular gale, a cyclone the term universally applied in Al-lslam to the "Deluge," the "Flood" of Noah.
- And since I left him, universally is he praised by those who know him best, for the best of Husbands, an indulgent Father, and quiet Neighbour.
- There needs to be an alternative term for "superconference," the word universally used for the 16-team conferences that could soon reshape college football.
- _Taste_ is a term universally applied in criticism of the fine-arts, such as painting, sculpture, architecture, &c., &c., of which there are many schools -- of
- I am seventy-six years old, and I can bear testimony, that from my infancy it was the term universally employed in Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Cheshire, Lancashire, and, I think probable, in the more northern counties.
- I have mentioned, that in early times Cahen was a title universally conferred upon priests and prophets: hence Lycophron, who has continually allusions to obsolete terms, calls the two diviners, Mopsus and Amphilochus, Κυνας.
- Attempting to fortify and extend the concept of g, then, or some attempt to develop some other notion of general intelligence that can be applied universally, is the only thing that could possibly give meaning to the term "intelligence" in the context of ID.
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