¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Monogamously
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Monogamously
Literary usage of Monogamously
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology: Including Many of the Principal by James Mark Baldwin (1901)
"... are inadequate to defining ' not/ and the former of them is mere surplusage.
In fact, in a universe of monogamously married people, taking any class, ..."
2. Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology: Including Many of the Principal by James Mark Baldwin (1901)
"In fact, in a universe of monogamously married people, taking any class, the A's,
Every A is a non-spouse to whatever is non-spouse to every A, and Whatever ..."
3. The Animal Kingdom Arranged in Conformity with Its Organization by Georges Cuvier, Edward Griffith, Charles Hamilton Smith, Edward Pidgeon, John Edward Gray, George Robert Gray (1829)
"They fly well; live at all times monogamously; build in trees or the clefts of
rocks, and lay but a small number of eggs, in general two, though it is true ..."
4. Culture & Ethnology by Robert Harry Lowie (1917)
"... potential wife while my wife's sisters are my and my brothers' potential wives
even though marriage be never actually consummated except monogamously. ..."
5. The Man-made World: Or, Our Androcentric Culture by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1911)
"It makes a widening margin of what we call "surplus women," meaning more than
enough to be monogamously married; and these women, not being economically ..."
6. Women and Economics: A Study of the Economic Relation Between Men and Women by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1898)
"... or, at least, not mate monogamously, unless bought and bribed through the
common animal necessities of food and shelter, and chained by law and custom. ..."
7. Pre-Malthusian Doctrines of Population: A Study in the History of Economic by Charles Emil Stangeland (1904)
"... blessed by God as the seminary of the human race and devised for the replenishment
of the earth, and therefore permitted, yet singly" (monogamously). ..."
8. Studies in Ancient History: The Second Series; Comprising an Inquiry Into by John Ferguson McLennan (1896)
"... as the class of rich persons is far from numerous, all the free men, and even
most of the slaves, still find means to marry, ie monogamously (pp. ..."