Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for ethnologically. Search instead for roentgenologically.

ethnologically

American  
[eth-nuh-lah-jik-uh-lee] / ˌɛθ nəˈlɑ dʒɪk ə li /

adverb

  1. with respect to ethnology.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It takes a rare and special event to provoke the use of the phrase "ethnologically diverse" in a football-related press release, and this is it.

From The Guardian • May 28, 2010

Already ethnologically Italian, it was won from Austria in World War I in campaigns that cost 650,000 dead, 1,547,000 wounded and missing�casualties that are intimately remembered today in every Italian town.

From Time Magazine Archive

Young Australian Sirs: Although ethnologically we are the most British of the Dominions, temperamentally we are by a long stretch the least.

From Time Magazine Archive

The people were massed one might say ethnologically.

From Short Stories of the New America Interpreting the America of this age to high school boys and girls by Various

It is sufficient to state that the British political dependency of Aden is, ethnologically, an Arab town.

From The Ethnology of the British Colonies and Dependencies by Latham, R. G. (Robert Gordon)