variously

IPA: vˈɛriʌsɫi

adverb

  • In various ways; diversely.
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Examples of "variously" in Sentences

  • The origin is variously derived.
  • The headwaters of the brook are variously given.
  • The conception of Christ was variously entertained.
  • However, the exact day was variously given by the sources.
  • Depending on the field, the problem is variously apprehended.
  • In the life sciences the term adaptability is used variously.
  • In the Reformed Churches, the Eucharist is variously administered.
  • He was the first to take the title variously spelled in English as
  • He is variously described as having a powerful but listless intellect.
  • The aperture or peristome of the shell may be simple or variously modified.
  • In 1547, he was the first to take the title variously spelled in English as
  • As are many aspects of the social sciences, the movement is variously defined.
  • The English Patient became Don't Ask Me Who I Am. Boogie Nights, which centred on its well-endowed hero, got a title variously translated as
  • It was given a distinct name, _Vuelta Abajo_, a term variously translated but referring to the downward bend of the section of the island in which that grade is produced.
  • Ernesto Guevara de la Serna commonly known as Che Guevara, El Che or just Che (‘Che’ variously translates as “Hey, you ..”, or “Chum”, or “Buddy”, or “Pal”, or “The Kid”).
  • He's just asked for a show of hands to establish who's been to what he refers to variously as a "demonstration" and an "experiment" like this before, and only a few have gone up.
  • Todd Kennedy is referred to variously as a “leading Californian fruit preservationist and historian,” a “rare fruit expert,” a “renowned fruit connoisseur” and a “fruit rescuer.”
  • The "Middle West" is a term variously used by the public, but for the purpose of the present paper, it will be applied to that region of the United States included in the census reports under the name of the North Central division, comprising the States of Ohio,
  • So a perpetual antinomy would exist between internal impulse and external constraint, were it not that that external constraint is reflected within the individual mind by a secondary and overlying set of inhibitions and promptings which we call variously the "moral sense," the "sense of duty," or "conscience."

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