Lexicographical Neighbors of Triadically
Literary usage of Triadically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. History of the Inductive Sciences from the Earliest to the Present Time by William Whewell (1859)
"The intelligible and intellectual gods produce all things triadically; for the
monads in these latter are divided according to number; and what the monad ..."
2. History of the Inductive Sciences from the Earliest to the Present Time by William Whewell (1857)
"... the number seven is introduced.11 'The intelligible and intellectual gods
produce all things triadically; for the monads in these latter are divided ..."
3. Idola Theatri: A Criticism of Oxford Thought and Thinkers from the by Henry Cecil Sturt, ( (1906)
"... to the understanding of Hegel.1 The Logic is divided triadically into the
doctrine of Being, the doctrine of Essence, and the doctrine of the Notion. ..."
4. Orpheus by George Robert Stow Mead (1896)
"This is again triadically subdivided. Thus we get (a) a paternal or ruling
triad, (<5) a vivi- fic triad, ..."
5. History of the Inductive Sciences: From the Earliest to the Present Times by William Whewell (1837)
"The intelligible and intellectual gods produce all things triadically; for the
monads in these are divided according to number; and what the monad was in ..."
6. The New European Diasporas: National Minorities and Conflict in Eastern Europe by Michael Mandelbaum (2000)
"Rather, democracy is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for resolving
ethnic issues, for the avoidance of the kind of triadically induced explosions ..."
7. The Irish Version of the Historia Britonum of Nennius by Nennius, James Henthorn Todd, Algernon Herbert (1848)
"Taliesin (or rather some one assuming his person) uses that name triadically,
that is, in distinction from ..."
8. The Irish Version of the Historia Britonum of Nennius by Nennius, James Henthorn Todd, Algernon Herbert (1848)
"Taliesin (or rather some one assuming his person) uses that name triadically,
that is, in distinction from ..."