orthodoxly

Anglais

Étymologie

(XVIIe siècle) Composé de orthodox et du suffixe -ly.

Adverbe

orthodoxly

  1. Orthodoxement.
    • 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.  (Abraham Tucker, The Light of Nature Pursued, III.12, 1778)
      La traduction en français de l’exemple manque. (Ajouter)
    • Biology is orthodoxly the part of science that deals directly with the phenomena of living matter.  (Scudder Klyce, Sins of Science, XXV.1, 1925)
      La traduction en français de l’exemple manque. (Ajouter)
    • 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.  ("Don Juan", Time (magazine), 31 mars 1930)
      La traduction en français de l’exemple manque. (Ajouter)
  2. (Religion) Orthodoxement.
    • 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.  (Agehananda Bharati, The Ochre Robe, 1980)
      La traduction en français de l’exemple manque. (Ajouter)
    • The teaching here is orthodoxly Islamic, the preoccupation with assessing the relation of works to faith is very much of the European fifteenth century.  (LP Harvey, Islamic Spain, 1250 à 1500, p. 91, 1990)
      La traduction en français de l’exemple manque. (Ajouter)

Prononciation

Références

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