Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Literately the act a suspect of being thrown into a Police Van.
An amazing food examined, literately, from many perspectives.
Literately the Isle of Dykes, which then got corrupted over the years.
They could literately 'see the music.'
Poteau (literately "pole", figuratively a paper candidate).
Literately 'martial ways', or martial art.
No composer and lyricist has taught us more, literately and intricately, about maturity than Stephen Sondheim.
Hong Kong people even started to calque English constructions, for example, "噉都唔 make sense" (literately "it still does not make sense.")
The publications were literately labelled as "Lieferung" (which is German for "consignment" or "delivery") followed by a Roman numeral indicating the volume number.
This state highway continues with a seamless transition that literately ignores US 19W existence, heading towards the towns of Burnsville and Spruce Pine.
They all can be equally effective on their day especially in the summer and autumn months, and there are literately thousands to choose from all made from a variety of materials.
It was not until refurbishment that the problem was solved once and for all by covering up the cars' exterior literately with adhesive, giving a new livery that is similar to the C751B trains.
For two and a half hours, these people look knowingly at each other and talk literately....Ettore Scola is an accomplished, sometimes remarkable director, but he has got himself into an arch and soggy genre."
Unteachable, all-prescient and wrapped in a shroud of second-guessing, I would sit in the sanctity of my underwear and spew insight faster and keener and certainly more literately than any former player turned broadcaster/cheerleader/stooge of management.
That it goes on, literately for pages, in celebration of the glory of language and the transformational power of learning, without forgetting to sing and dance, is an important reminder of how the Broadway musical theater was once in possession of a soul.
Within his non-technical ambit, he wrote pleasantly, literately, and intelligently, often quite thoughtfully, on a wide range of biological subjects, and he did so constructively and soundly at a level accessible to a wider and younger public than most popular scientific writing.
This status was however not universally available to the Blacks of the African territories i.e. those who were not "assimilados" (which literately translates to "assimilated") which meant those Africans who had not given up their tribal customs nor reached minimum educational standards.
In prison he discovered his artistic talent, and used his art to literately paint his way to freedom some when his famous self-portrait "15 to Life" was exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art which lead to a flood of media attention.
And despite much-noted troubles that called for rewrites in the literately funny script (by Mr. Cleese and Iain Johnstone) and the services of two directors (Robert Young and Fred Schepisi), the film's loose plotting isn't much of a problem.
Among the book problems she had to confront, Ms. Kasdin said, was the need to deal literately with an illiterate family that celebrates life in the hardest circumstances, to capture a folkloric quality and to avoid slipping into "Beverly Hillbillies" stereotype or Dogpatch characatures.
Rayner cannot resist the British crow that they started downhill at Montana, Switzerland, in 1911; or that the Wengen Swiss are everlastingly grateful to the Downhill Only Club (otherwise, not too literately, the DHO) for teaching them how to race and how to lose.
The book, as smoothly and literately translated by Anselm Hollo, is in some ways a sly refutation of Stanley's own self-serving account of these events ("How I Found Livingstone," published in 1872), as well as an implicit condemnation of the casual and brutish racism that characterized his entire era.
When Martin learns that his recently deceased uncle has bequeathed him a sailing yacht once owned by Clark Gable, he decides to take the family to the island of Ste. Pomme de Terre ("Saint Potato" literately "Apple of Earth" ) to retrieve the boat so he can sell it.