Lexicographical Neighbors of Rudimentarily
Literary usage of Rudimentarily
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Arts of the World: Comparative Art Studies by Edwin Swift Balch (1920)
"Many of the slabs, however, are not even rudimentarily pictorial but are merely
rows of figures standing side by side, as for instance in some bronze panels ..."
2. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by American Neurological Association, Philadelphia Neurological Society, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association, Boston Society of Psychiatry and Neurology (1878)
"... and the marine species, in which that body is even , rudimentarily foliated.
That the posterior longitudinal fasciculus should exist so well developed ..."
3. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1903)
"... is due to changes in processes purely physical, subject to the phys- .1 law
of association ; yet here, rudimentarily, is perception, representativeness, ..."
4. A Short History of English Literature by George Saintsbury (1898)
"It is an interesting piece in not quite 250 lines of octosyllabic couplet, but
rather rudimentarily dramatic. A prologue introduces it; Christ and Satan ..."
5. Victorian Prose Masters: Thackeray--Carlyle--George Eliot--Matthew Arnold by William Crary Brownell (1901)
"Her statements are scientific, but never even rudimentarily rhetorical, if we
except the use of irony, in which she was sometimes very happy. ..."
6. Victorian Prose Masters: Thackeray--Carlyle--George Eliot--Matthew Arnold by William Crary Brownell (1901)
"Her statements are scientific, but never even rudimentarily rhetorical, if we
except the use of irony, in which she was sometimes very happy. ..."
7. Victorian Prose Masters: Thackeray--Carlyle--George Eliot--Matthew Arnold by William Crary Brownell (1901)
"_,Her statements are scientific, but never even rudimentarily rhetorical, if we
except the us£ of irony, in which she- was sometimes very happy. ..."