¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Literarily
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Literarily
Literary usage of Literarily
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. English Literary Miscellany by Theodore Whitefield Hunt (1914)
"While, as we have seen, he is not intellectually clear, he is intellectually
suggestive; and while he is not, if we may coin a word, literarily artistic, ..."
2. The Circus, and Other Essays by Joyce Kilmer (1916)
"When your literarily inclined maiden aunt from West Swansey, New Hampshire (by
a sacred convention all maiden aunts are literarily inclined), ..."
3. A Diary from Dixie by Mary Boykin Miller Chesnut (1905)
"We had been willing to admit that their universal free-school education had put
them, rank and file, ahead of us literarily, but these letters do not attest ..."
4. The Atlantic Monthly by Making of America Project (1865)
"... this sorry volume will be more than a curiosity : it will be literarily and
artistically an object of great and constantly increasing value. ..."
5. Publishers Weekly by Publishers' Board of Trade (U.S.), Book Trade Association of Philadelphia, American Book Trade Union, Am. Book Trade Association, R.R. Bowker Company (1913)
"... while potatoes brought 2 shillings, 2 pence. A common day laborer received 2
shillings for a day's work. Were he, then, literarily inclined, ..."