unobviously

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English

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Etymology

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From unobvious +‎ -ly.

Adverb

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unobviously (comparative more unobviously, superlative most unobviously)

  1. In a way that is not obvious.
    • 2004, Georges Dicker, Kant's Theory of Knowledge: An Analytical Introduction, page 49:
      As I have already indicated, however, there is reason to think that at least some of the principles that Kant takes to be synthetic a priori are instead unobviously analytic, and so I shall assume that if Kant shows that a principle associated with one of his categories is unobviously analytic, that too shows that the category is objectively valid.