¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Repetitiously
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Repetitiously
Literary usage of Repetitiously
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sixteen Years' Preaching and Procedure at Wareham, MS. by Samuel Nott (1845)
"The paper from which this uniting clause was taken was scrupulously and laboriously,
was even repetitiously explicit, requiring, in express words and in ..."
2. A Crusade of Brotherhood: A History of the American Missionary Association by Augustus Field Beard (1909)
"The concrete facts and figures which are repetitiously — and necessarily
repetitiously — set forth in our magazine, The American Missionary, from month to ..."
3. A Crusade of Brotherhood: A History of the American Missionary Association by Augustus Field Beard (1909)
"The concrete facts and figures which are repetitiously — and necessarily
repetitiously — set forth in our magazine ..."
4. The Parish Will Case, in the Court of Appeals: The Statement of Facts, and by Joseph Delafield (1862)
"Finally, she named $5000, and Mr. Parish gave the same sound and motion as before ;
that is, he said " Yeh, yeh, yeh," and bowed his head repetitiously. ..."
5. Literary Criticism from the Elizabethan Dramatists by John Tucker Murray, David Klein, Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin, William Winter, Rosamond Gilder, Felix Emmanuel Schelling, William Dean Howells, Mary Findlater, Jane Helen Findlater, Allan McAulay, William Randolph Hearst (1908)
"Into these matters there is no need here repetitiously to enter. Suffice it to
recognize in Fletcher the lens which, breaking up the clear white light of ..."
6. Thought and Expression in the Sixteenth Century by Henry Osborn Taylor (1920)
"... and most repetitiously, such a full inductive or experimental method as would
rectify and enormously extend man's knowledge of his world; ..."
7. Thought and Expression in the Sixteenth Century by Henry Osborn Taylor (1920)
"They both declaimed against the vicious methods of scholarship and science of
their day; they both set forth at length, and most repetitiously, such a full ..."