10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «NOMINATELY»
Discover the use of
nominately in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
nominately and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Union Dictionary: Containing All that Truly Useful in ...
Nominately, n<i1n'|né-n.'|te-le. ad. particularly. Nomination, ném-ml:-nl'sh6n. s.
act of mentioning by name. Wott.—Power of appoin ting. _- Clar. Nominative, n<'>
m'm&-ni-tiv. e. the case, in grammar, that primarily designates the 'name of any ...
2
An English-Welsh pronouncing dictionary: with an analysis of ...
... yr Enwoliaid [ynol i Enwoliaeth Nominalistic, nom-i-nal-is'-tic, a. perth-
Nominalize,nom'-i-nal-eiz,v.a.troiynenw Nominally, nom'-i-nal-li, ad. wrth ei enw ;
o ran enw, mewn dim ond enw Nominate, nom'-i-nët, v. a. enwi; pennodi
Nominately, ...
3
Viger's Greek idioms abridged and translated into English ...
Arrian. de Exp. Al. ii, 13. âvrò pvńpns and árrò aró/uaros, eìvreïvz методист/тот
memory, by heart: Plat. Theaet. Hence ân'caroparíêetv, to recite or dictate from
memory : Plato Euthyd. p. 276. à1rò -nîw óvopárwv, nominately, by name: Aristid.
Franciscus VIGERUS, John SEAGER, 1838
4
The English Works ... Publish'd in His Life-time; Together ...
... Nemo tenetur deßcobeneìîciu'm facere, No Man'is tie'd to give Lor-um. his
Ground to a charitable Ufè. Locua` religioßu is that which is alhgned ligiofus. to
ibme Ofiìce of Religion, and nominately where the Body of ' a dead Per{он hath
been ...
5
The Royal Phraseological English-French, French-English ...
Il en a la nomi— nq.tion, ha ha: the xnomimtion——appointment—of tlnese aces.
. p NOMINATIVEMENT, adv. nominately; by nome. NOMMEMENT, adv. namely ;
particularly. NOMMER, v. a. n'y. 1ère conj., to naine. Ils I'ont nomnæ' François, ...
John Charles Tarver, 1867
6
The English works of Sir Henry Spelman, publ. in his ...
Locus rel'tgiojus is that which is assigned ligiosus. t0 fome office of Religion, and
nominately where the Body of a dead Person hath been buried. For by the very
Burial of that Body, the Nature of the Soile is changed from secular, and, ...
Henry Spelman, Edmund Gibson, 1723
7
The Union Dictionary, containing all that is truly useful in ...
Nominally, nòin'mè-nìl-lè. ad. by name, titular] f. Nomiliate, nôxn'mè-nâte. v. a. to
name. Wort. -To entitle. Spera-To appoint by name. , Nominately, nôln'mè-ulteslè.
ad. particularly. Nomination, nóm-mè-nl'shůn. s. act of men` tioning by name.
Thomas BROWNE (LL.D.), 1822
8
English Works, Published in His Life-time: Together with His ...
... there; for, * Nemo tenetur desho bemficium facere, No Man is tied to give his
Ground to a charitable Use Low: religiosiu is that which is assigned to some
Office of Religion, and nominately where the Body of a dead Person hath been
buried.
Henry Spelman, Edmund Gibson, 1727
9
The standard pronouncing dictionary of the English language
Nominately. Nom-I-na'tion, *. The act of nominating. Nom'I-na-tive, a. In Gram,
that names, and nothing more ;—s. The form of a noun that designates the
person or thing that governs the verb, as the Nominative case; — ad.
Nominatively.
10
A Complete and Universal English Dictionary: Including Not ...
NOMINATELY, ad. particularly. NOMINATION, [nomination, Fr.] the act of
mentioning by name ; the power of appointing by name. NOMINATIVE, *. [
nominatif, Fr. nominativus, Lat] in Grammar, the first case of all declinable nouns,
whence all ...
James Barclay, William Shorton, 1824