Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Less emotively, should we go to war on Iran.
Here he enters emotively in the world of subatomic physics and the human mind.
Instead, it presents emotively various aspects of the Passion.
He was a camera for hire, shooting subjects rapidly and emotively, to meet a pressing deadline.
Physically, vocally and emotively, this tough show-business survivor from Brooklyn is a lot larger than life.
And one must admit that the average human mind is 'a marvelous source of emotively generated bio-energy.
Third, values are emotively intuited.
Or, to put it more emotively, why should an employer be compelled to provide medical coverage or any other benefit for a nonemployee?
And just as he did while working his way to his previous 18 trophies, Sampras put on a low-key, emotively unremarkable, performance yesterday.
Carlile is known for possessing a big voice that cracks emotively when she is belting.
It is another Labour false and restrictive Labour narrative - one that works emotively but not in practice.
Paolo Gavanelli's Tonio was emotively busy if vocally limited.
Everyone has a human, emotional motive behind their work and outlook and science can be used as religiously, emotively and dogmatically as any religion.
The Irish nationalist and republican movements that developed after 1850 often harked back emotively to the former chiefs' losses, but without ever suggesting that they be reinstated.
Scheler viewed values as emotively experienced with reference to a universal, objective, constant and unchanging apriori hierarchy of value modalities.
Three days later, at his funeral, his contemporary Jose Manuel Estrada, renowned Argentine writer, eulogized him emotively (translated from Spanish):
But in the immediate repeat of that phrase Mr. Lang was already up to his attention-grabbing tricks: coyly prolonging the upbeat, milking the tune emotively, making everything cute.
Between the yards of windy musings about secrets and storms and faith and blah blah blah, the actors are little more than emotively overwrought narrative mouthpieces.
Though most of the recordings were made in the 50's, when Hayes was past his prime, 12 spirituals, emotively sung, stand as a monument to the vitality of the black folk tradition.
On the Israeli right, the 1967 lines are sometimes described emotively as "Auschwitz borders" - implying that they are so difficult to defend that they risk a second Holocaust.
Large populations of crown-of-thorns starfish (sometime emotively known as 'plagues') have been substantiated as occurring at twenty one locations of coral reefs during the 1960s to 1980s.
As a concept belonging to the study of ethics, Ressentiment represents the antithetical process of Scheler's emotively informed Non-Formal Ethics of Values.
Holman speaks emotively of parents 'losing' their children, which suggests that he identifies the wishes and feelings of parents as being of not insignificant importance alongside the needs of children.
The flyer describes the park emotively as 'the execution place of Serbian people in World War II', but such sectarianism is completely alien to Bogdanovic's way of thinking.
In 1887 the "Perpetual Crimes Act" was passed to deal with the offenses surrounding the Campaign, and it was described emotively in the nationalist press as a Coercion Act.