Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In doing this inquiry, we can work the issue descriptively, and ask how things have gone.
The feature was named descriptively in a 1935 British chart.
The city is descriptively named for the large rocks on a nearby river bank.
The chestnut colour is used descriptively in the common name.
The term is used in two broad ways, either descriptively or normatively.
This view, he argues, is not just morally undesirable, but descriptively wrong.
The feature is descriptively named from the surrounding rock formations.
The resulting figure would more descriptively be called the "ideal-reference-device-specific performance."
Its name was given descriptively, probably by the Discovery Investigations in 1926-30.
Relevant data from these studies are reported descriptively.
If not all their works are actually theatrical, they tend to be programmatic or at least descriptively titled.
The feature is descriptively named from the ice cliffs bounding it to the south.
Numerous systems exist to name specific sugars more descriptively.
I'm trying to present different feelings descriptively and as accurately as I can."
Descriptively, the Pure Theory of Law has always been about power.
The feature was charted and named descriptively by DI, 1929-30.
According to these, a genus should fulfill three criteria to be descriptively useful:
Speaking descriptively, utilitarianism doesn't hold true, though the utilitarian claims that it does.
The cove is descriptively named by Spain in connection with a rock glacier draining into it.
Perfect as they are descriptively, they have a stifled, lifeless quality that turns off the eye.
The word is rarely used of oneself, but rather is applied descriptively to the behavior of other people.
The subsections are often called themes, and each is vastly and descriptively labeled.
Charted and named descriptively by DI personnel in 1929.
Many gymnastics flips are descriptively named, based on the direction of rotation and the body position that is assumed during execution.
Sorry, to clarify, I'm talking prescriptively, not descriptively.