¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Interpretively
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interpretively
Literary usage of Interpretively
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An English Garner: Ingatherings from Our History & Literature by Edward Arber (1895)
"... that every word of the book [The Shortest Way] he suffered for, was both
literally and interpretively, the Sense of the Party pointed at; true in fact, ..."
2. Later Stuart Tracts by George Atherton Aitken (1903)
"... that every word of the book [The Shortest Way] he suffered for, was both
literally and interpretively, the Sense of the Party pointed at; true in fact, ..."
3. Partial Evaluation and Automatic Program Generation by Neil D. Jones, Carsten K. Gomard, Peter Sestoft (1993)
"A user-oriented language needs a processor, and these processors usually work
interpretively, alternating between reading and deciphering the user's ..."
4. St. James's Magazine by S. C. Hall (1862)
"They are not literally, but interpretively, translated ; or, in other words, they
art imitated in the language of the New Testament. ..."
5. Delineation of Roman Catholicism: Drawn from the Authentic and Acknowledged by Charles Elliott (1851)
"The ancients maintained this independence and equality of bishops, particularly
in respect to the Roman bishops, interpretively and practically. ..."
6. Bible in Schools Plans of Many Lands: Documents by Wilbur Fisk Crafts (1914)
"... 31-33, 55, 57-60; Psalms v, 1-9, 11, 12. Above prayers and those following,
appropriate to read interpretively with stories of Joseph's trials or after. ..."