Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The information is arranged encyclopedically, so you have to know what you are looking up.
The text is encyclopedically referenced with over 1000 notes.
Consisting of 81 documents spanning 450 years, the show has no intention of covering its subject encyclopedically.
They are usually arranged alphabetically or encyclopedically and may provide a topical index to aid researchers in finding specific forms.
Indeed, Mr. Korus's work is seen by his peers as being encyclopedically thorough.
In spite of this, he's encyclopedically conversant with antecedents in poetry, fiction, painting and music.
Even the encyclopedically knowledgeable Damrosch is stumped.
Few people cover the pitfalls as encyclopedically as Moore, who joined Project Match in 1989 and raced through eight jobs in the first three years.
It was not surprising to Riker that Denbahr was the first to respond, nor that she responded enthusiastically and encyclopedically.
Wikipedia seeks to create a summary of all human knowledge in the form of an online encyclopedia, with each topic of knowledge covered encyclopedically in one article.
The ancient herbal remedy digitalis appears to have both inotropic and chronotropic properties that have been recorded encyclopedically for centuries and is still useful today.
Both the negative- and positive-energy cases were considered by Fock and Bargmann and have been reviewed encyclopedically by Bander and Itzykson.
Jefferson's collection greatly expanded the library because it was more comprehensive, exploring "encyclopedically the whole course of human knowledge," said James Gilreath, the Library of Congress's American history specialist on rare books.
An amorphous blob of industrial goo marketed to children, its chief virtue was flexibility, and its many uses were encyclopedically demonstrated in Saturday morning television commercials: You can stretch Silly Putty into any shape!
In his highly original "Flaubert's Parrot" (1985), he wrote about a man obsessed with Gustave Flaubert, and by encyclopedically evoking the great French novelist and identifying himself with the husband of Mme.
However we take cookbooks- grammatically or encyclopedically, as storehouses of craft or illusions of knowledge-one can't read them in bed for many years without feeling that there is a conspiracy between readers and writers to obscure the ultimate point.
In his hymnographic compilations and chronologic treatises, Ioane-Zosime provides a detailed list of sources as well as an encyclopedically organized calendar of saint's feast days and the chronology of the Georgian liturgy.
It was the first comprehensive attempt to treat everything that had any connexion with theology encyclopedically in one work, and also the first attempt to unite all the Catholic savants of Germany, in the production of one great work.
As the center focus of cardiology, the heart has numerous anatomical features (e.g., atria, ventricles, heart valves) and numerous physiological features (e.g., systole, heart sounds, afterload) that have been encyclopedically documented for many centuries.
"Like its closest spiritual forebear, Bret Easton Ellis's encyclopedically inertial Less Than Zero (1985), The Delivery Man offers unflinching glimpses at mores in free fall, shock treatment in service to a woozy morality tale.
In decades to come, Gounod's melodious adaptation of the most familiar episodes from Goethe's densely philosophical, encyclopedically symbolic 12,000-verse dramatic poem showed up so often that some took to calling the Met the Faustspielhaus, punning on the German for a festival hall.
By 8 AD, he had completed his most ambitious work, the Metamorphoses, a hexameter epic poem in 15 books which encyclopedically catalogues transformations in Greek and Roman mythology from the emergence of the cosmos to the deification of Julius Caesar.
He also anticipated the true spirit of the 19th-century concerto in the "Concerto for Bassoon Versus Orchestra" (with the solo line taken by Professor Schickele, who is as encyclopedically knowledgeable about music as he is funny and is himself no slouch as a composer).
Ms. Kelley, author of the now notorious "Nancy Reagan: The Unauthorized Biography" (and also the author of unauthorized biographies of Frank Sinatra, Jacqueline Onassis and Elizabeth Taylor), has written one of the most encyclopedically vicious books in the history of encyclopedic viciousness.