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Definition of Mechanically
1. Adverb. In a mechanical manner; by a mechanism. "This door opens mechanically"
2. Adverb. In a machinelike manner; without feeling. "He smiled mechanically"
Definition of Mechanically
1. adv. In a mechanical manner.
Definition of Mechanically
1. Adverb. In a mechanical manner. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mechanically
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mechanically
Literary usage of Mechanically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Clays: Their Occurrence, Properties, and Uses, with Especial Reference to by Heinrich Ries (1906)
"Mechanically •combined water or moisture. 2. Chemically combined water.
Mechanically combined water.—The mechanically combined water is that which is held ..."
2. The Gas-engine: A Treatise on the Internal-combustion Engine Using Gas by Frederick Remsen Hutton (1903)
"With mechanically operated valves governing must be done by throttling the ...
The objection to the single mechanically operated inlet-valve which has been ..."
3. Structural and Field Geology for Students of Pure and Applied Science by James Geikie (1905)
"CHAPTER IV ROCKS—continued Classification of Derivative Rocks :—I. Mechanically-formed
Rocks, including Subaerial and /Eolian, ..."
4. Structural and Field Geology for Students of Pure and Applied Science by James Geikie (1910)
"Hence many have been formed mechanically; others, again, are due to chemical
action; while yet others are of organic origin. ..."
5. The Making, Shaping and Treating of Steel by James McIntyre Camp, Charles Blaine Francis (1920)
"SECTION I. METHODS AND EFFECTS OF Mechanically WORKING STEEL. Methods of Shaping
Steel: After the separation of the metal from its ores, which in modern ..."
6. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and (1915)
"Mechanically Carried Flue Dirt.—The table following shows the analysis of flue
dust, using 90 per cent. Mesabi ores, for the year 1912: Analysis of ..."
7. The Making, Shaping and Treating of Steel by James McIntyre Camp, Charles Blaine Francis (1920)
"All these objects are accomplished in fairly efficient degree in the Hughes
mechanically poked producer, a brief description of which follows: The Hughes ..."
8. A Manual of Elementary Geology: Or, The Ancient Changes of the Earth and Its by Sir Charles Lyell (1853)
"Bands and nodules of clay-iron-stone are common in coal-measures, and are formed,
says Sir H. De la Bêche, of carbonate of iron, mingled mechanically with ..."