mimically
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adverb
[edit]mimically (comparative more mimically, superlative most mimically)
- In a mimicking or imitative manner.
- mimically represented emotions
- 1844, Jean Calvin, John Allen, Institutes of the Christian Religion - Volume 2, page 463:
- In the last place, he argues, that if it be lawful to baptize infants without understanding, baptism may be mimically and jocularly administered by boys in play.
- 1900, James Puckle, The Club: Or, A Grey Cap for a Green Head, page 129:
- Be neither mimically in , nor ridiculously out of the fashion ; let your apparel be neat , not chargeable , fitted as well to your estate, years, and profession, as to your person.
- 2007, Christiane Schönfeld, Hermann Rasche, Processes of Transposition: German Literature and Film, page 128:
- The script of Stroheim's Greed (1924), despite the encumbrance of inter-titles, demonstrates how much psychology could indeed be portrayed mimically and through a proliferation of perspectival close-ups and reaction shots;
- In a manner that preserves the form and internal structure of an organic substance.
- 1987, Journal of Sedimentary Petrology - Volume 57, page 967:
- Allochems and preexisting cements may be unreplaced, partially replaced, replaced mimically, or replaced nonmimically.
- 1990, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, page 504:
- The overgrowths have been mimically dolomitized.
- 1994, Preliminary Analysis of Integrated Stratigraphic Data from the South Venice Corehole, Sarasota County, Florida, page 124:
- The echinoid fragments are mimically replaced by silica.
- 2003, Sam Boggs, Petrology of Sedimentary Rocks, page 490:
- If carbonate grains are completely replaced, they may be replaced mimically or nonmimically .
References
[edit]- “mimically”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.