Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- In a correlative relation.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adverb In a correlative relation.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adverb in a
correlative manner
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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And what, correlatively, is the being of potentiality — not its undeniable possibility, but rather its immanent existence?
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And, correlatively, a person who takes to adjective “cis” (whether cisgender or cissexual) is someone for whom assigned gender (/sex) and self-assigned gender (/sex) are in accord.
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But the bottom-line issue in the appointments process must concern the kinds of judicial decisions that will serve the country and correlatively, the effect the nominee will have on the court's decisions.
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At some colleges, it is normatively appropriate to sing the praises of the place, perhaps beyond what they deserve; correlatively, at Harvard, it seems normatively expected that, if asked, you complain that research trumps teaching at the great university in Cambridge.
Jonathan R. Cole: Myths About Higher Education in the United States Jonathan R. Cole 2010
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At some colleges, it is normatively appropriate to sing the praises of the place, perhaps beyond what they deserve; correlatively, at Harvard, it seems normatively expected that, if asked, you complain that research trumps teaching at the great university in Cambridge.
Jonathan R. Cole: Myths About Higher Education in the United States Jonathan R. Cole 2010
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But the bottom-line issue in the appointments process must concern the kinds of judicial decisions that will serve the country and correlatively, the effect the nominee will have on the court's decisions.
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He emphasised that older scientific theories, like Aristotle's theory of motion, had powerful empirical and argumentative support, and stressed, correlatively, that the heroes of the scientific revolution, such as Galileo, were not as scrupulous as they were sometimes represented to be.
Paul Feyerabend Preston, John 2009
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It is unable to stop other teams for the full course of a game, and correlatively and worse, it seems unable to tackle.
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It was a common view in the seventeenth century that sensations of color and light, in particular, also serve another function in sense perception: they enable us to discriminate shapes and, correlatively, individual bodies.
Malebranche's Theory of Ideas and Vision in God Nolan, Lawrence 2008
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While emerging from Kant's analysis of aesthetics, this conceptuality entails a radical form of epistemology and, correlatively, a radical form of historicity.
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