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Definition of Archetypally
1. adv. With reference to the archetype; originally. "Parts archetypally distinct."
Definition of Archetypally
1. Adverb. In an archetypal way. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Archetypally
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Archetypally
Literary usage of Archetypally
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Principal forms of the skeleton and of the teeth by Richard Owen (1854)
"... which, archetypally, may be regarded as deformities by excess of growth to
fulfil a particular use, dependent on the maximization of the brain; ..."
2. Orr's Circle of the Sciences: A Series of Treatires on the Principles of by Richard Owen, Wm S Orr, John Radford Young, Alexander Jardine, Robert Gordon Latham, Edward Smith, William Sweetland Dallas (1854)
"... is most conspicuous in the neural spines of the three chief segments, which,
archetypally, may be regarded as deformities by excess of growth to fulfil ..."
3. Systematic Theology: A Compendium and Commonplace-book Designed for the Use by Augustus Hopkins Strong (1907)
"Christ is the Image of God absolutely and archetypally. As the perfect representation
of tho Father's perfections, the Sou would seem to be the ..."
4. Philosophy in Poetry: A Study of Sir John Davies's Poem "Nosce Teipsum" by Elias Hershey Sneath (1903)
"... suggestions of a doctrine of pre-existence in the form of souls existing
archetypally in the Divine 1 "The Works of Philo Judaeus," trans. by CD Yonge, ..."
5. The True Intellectual System of the Universe: Wherein All the Reason and by Ralph Cudworth, Johann Lorenz Mosheim (1845)
"... and archetypally all rationes and verities, and all particular created intellects
are but derivative participations of it, that are printed by it with ..."
6. The Baptist Quarterly Review by J R Baumes, Robert Stuart MacArtur, Henry C Vedder (1884)
"They are essential to structural form in its most general outline—archetypally
essential. Such proofs of the organic, spiritual, doctrinal, and structural ..."