orthodoxly
English
    
WOTD – 9 August 2011
    
Pronunciation
    
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈɔːθədɒksli/
- Audio (UK) - (file) 
 
Adverb
    
orthodoxly (comparative more orthodoxly, superlative most orthodoxly)
- In a correct or proper way; conventionally; correctly. [from 17th c.]
-  1778, Abraham Tucker, The Light of Nature Pursued, III.12:- if, after a season of thoughtlessness, you perceive your understanding on a sudden lively to discern, and your will vigorous to pursue heavenly things, you may orthodoxly conclude there has been an effusion, not that there is one now.
 
-  1925, Scudder Klyce, Sins of Science, XXV.1:- Biology is orthodoxly the part of science that deals directly with the phenomena of living matter.
 
-  31 March 1930, “Don Juan”, in Time:- So great was Ariel’s success and that of the similar Disraeli that readers might have expected Maurois to treat Shelley's friend and fellow-poet in the same style. But no miniature in enamel is this orthodoxly lengthy, appendixed, annotated biography of Byron.
 
 
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- In a religiously orthodox way; in accordance with accepted religious doctrine. [from 17th c.]
-  1980, Agehananda Bharati, The Ochre Robe:- He wears a turban, he puts on his sandal mark every morning, he bathes and eats and marries and dies orthodoxly; he probably begets children orthodoxly.
 
-  1990, LP Harvey, Islamic Spain, 1250 to 1500, page 91:- The teaching here is orthodoxly Islamic, the preoccupation with assessing the relation of works to faith is very much of the European fifteenth century.
 
 
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Translations
    
in a correct or proper way
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religion: according to doctrine
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