"politickly" meaning in Inglés

See politickly in All languages combined, or Wiktionary

Adverb

Forms: politickly [positive], more politickly most politickly [comparative]
Etymology: De politick y el sufijo -ly. Etymology templates: {{etimología|sufijo|politick|ly|leng=en}} De politick y el sufijo -ly
  1. Grafía obsoleta de politicly.
    Sense id: es-politickly-en-adv-1 Categories (other): EN:Grafías alternativas
The following are not (yet) sense-disambiguated
Categories (other): EN:Adverbios, Inglés

Download JSONL data for politickly meaning in Inglés (8.7kB)

{
  "categories": [
    {
      "kind": "other",
      "name": "EN:Adverbios",
      "parents": [],
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      "kind": "other",
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    }
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    {
      "args": {
        "1": "sufijo",
        "2": "politick",
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        "leng": "en"
      },
      "expansion": "De politick y el sufijo -ly",
      "name": "etimología"
    }
  ],
  "etymology_text": "De politick y el sufijo -ly.",
  "extra_sounds": {
    "pronunciación": "falta agregar"
  },
  "forms": [
    {
      "form": "politickly",
      "tags": [
        "positive"
      ]
    },
    {
      "form": "more politickly most politickly",
      "tags": [
        "comparative"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "lang": "Inglés",
  "lang_code": "en",
  "pos": "adv",
  "pos_title": "adverbio",
  "senses": [
    {
      "categories": [
        {
          "kind": "other",
          "name": "EN:Grafías alternativas",
          "parents": [],
          "source": "w"
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      "examples": [
        {
          "example_templates": [
            {
              "args": {
                "1": "Theſe wicked Spirits, doubtleſs, are politically and politickly conſtituted, ſubordinated, and ſituated.",
                "a": "John Reynolds",
                "c": "libro",
                "f": "1723",
                "t": "Inquiries Concerning the State and Oeconomy of the Angelical Worlds",
                "url": "http://books.google.com/books?id=OYdPAAAAYAAJ&hl=es&pg=PA59"
              },
              "expansion": ":*Ejemplo:\n::Theſe wicked Spirits, doubtleſs, are politically and politickly conſtituted, ſubordinated, and ſituated.John Reynolds. Inquiries Concerning the State and Oeconomy of the Angelical Worlds. 1723.",
              "name": "ejemplo"
            }
          ],
          "ref": "John Reynolds. Inquiries Concerning the State and Oeconomy of the Angelical Worlds. 1723.",
          "text": "Theſe wicked Spirits, doubtleſs, are politically and politickly conſtituted, ſubordinated, and ſituated."
        },
        {
          "example_templates": [
            {
              "args": {
                "1": "It has always been the Humour of Men to look for truly great and unexceptionable Characters in ancient Times ; Neſtor frequently tells the Greeks in Homer, what ſort of Perſons liv’d when he was a Boy, and they were eaſily admitted to be far ſuperior to the greateſt and moſt excellent then alive ; and had he been three times as old as he was, he might have almoſt deify’d his Heroes ; but it is hard to be conceived, that a Set of Men could ever be choſen by the Cotemporaries to have divine Honours paid them, whilſt numerous Perſons were alive, who knew their Imperfections, and who themſelves or their immediate Anceſtors might have as fair a Pretence, and come in Competition with them : Alexander the Great had but ill Succeſs in his Attempt to make the World believe him the Son of Jupiter Ammon ; nor could Numa Pompilius, the ſecond King of Rome, make Rumulus’s Tranſlation to Heaven ſo firmly believ’d, as not to leave room for ſubſequent Hiſtorians to report him kill’d by his Subjects (c) ; nor can I conceive that Julius Cæſar’s Canonization, tho’ it was contrived more politickly, and ſupported with more ſpecious and popular Appearances, would ever have ſtood long indiſputable, if the Light of Chriſtianity had not appeared ſo ſoon after this Time, as it did, and impaired the Credit of the Heathen Superſtitions.",
                "a": "Samuel Shuckford",
                "c": "libro",
                "f": "1731",
                "t": "The Sacred and Prophane History of the World Connected",
                "url": "http://books.google.com/books?id=CpBYoiQDvWUC&hl=es&pg=PA287"
              },
              "expansion": ":*Ejemplo:\n::It has always been the Humour of Men to look for truly great and unexceptionable Characters in ancient Times ; Neſtor frequently tells the Greeks in Homer, what ſort of Perſons liv’d when he was a Boy, and they were eaſily admitted to be far ſuperior to the greateſt and moſt excellent then alive ; and had he been three times as old as he was, he might have almoſt deify’d his Heroes ; but it is hard to be conceived, that a Set of Men could ever be choſen by the Cotemporaries to have divine Honours paid them, whilſt numerous Perſons were alive, who knew their Imperfections, and who themſelves or their immediate Anceſtors might have as fair a Pretence, and come in Competition with them : Alexander the Great had but ill Succeſs in his Attempt to make the World believe him the Son of Jupiter Ammon ; nor could Numa Pompilius, the ſecond King of Rome, make Rumulus’s Tranſlation to Heaven ſo firmly believ’d, as not to leave room for ſubſequent Hiſtorians to report him kill’d by his Subjects (c) ; nor can I conceive that Julius Cæſar’s Canonization, tho’ it was contrived more politickly, and ſupported with more ſpecious and popular Appearances, would ever have ſtood long indiſputable, if the Light of Chriſtianity had not appeared ſo ſoon after this Time, as it did, and impaired the Credit of the Heathen Superſtitions.Samuel Shuckford. The Sacred and Prophane History of the World Connected. 1731.",
              "name": "ejemplo"
            }
          ],
          "ref": "Samuel Shuckford. The Sacred and Prophane History of the World Connected. 1731.",
          "text": "It has always been the Humour of Men to look for truly great and unexceptionable Characters in ancient Times ; Neſtor frequently tells the Greeks in Homer, what ſort of Perſons liv’d when he was a Boy, and they were eaſily admitted to be far ſuperior to the greateſt and moſt excellent then alive ; and had he been three times as old as he was, he might have almoſt deify’d his Heroes ; but it is hard to be conceived, that a Set of Men could ever be choſen by the Cotemporaries to have divine Honours paid them, whilſt numerous Perſons were alive, who knew their Imperfections, and who themſelves or their immediate Anceſtors might have as fair a Pretence, and come in Competition with them : Alexander the Great had but ill Succeſs in his Attempt to make the World believe him the Son of Jupiter Ammon ; nor could Numa Pompilius, the ſecond King of Rome, make Rumulus’s Tranſlation to Heaven ſo firmly believ’d, as not to leave room for ſubſequent Hiſtorians to report him kill’d by his Subjects (c) ; nor can I conceive that Julius Cæſar’s Canonization, tho’ it was contrived more politickly, and ſupported with more ſpecious and popular Appearances, would ever have ſtood long indiſputable, if the Light of Chriſtianity had not appeared ſo ſoon after this Time, as it did, and impaired the Credit of the Heathen Superſtitions."
        },
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                "1": "Many taken with the Speciouſneſs and Magnificence of the Title praiſed up to the Skies ſo high and noble a Project ; calling it a Profeſſion truly worthy of the pontifical Majeſty, and of the great Soul of Julius, who could not have undertaken an Enterprize more generous, and which was formed with no leſs Prudence than Magnanimity ; ſince he had politickly contrived that Barbarians ſhould encounter with Barbarians, and that Foreigners more than Italians ſhould ſpend their Blood againſt the French, by which Means he would not only ſave the Lives of his Countrymen, but, after he had driven out one of the Parties, leave it much eaſier to expel the other, already weakened and enervated, with the Arms and Forces of Italy.",
                "a": "Francesco Guicciardini",
                "c": "libro",
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              "name": "ejemplo"
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          "text": "Many taken with the Speciouſneſs and Magnificence of the Title praiſed up to the Skies ſo high and noble a Project ; calling it a Profeſſion truly worthy of the pontifical Majeſty, and of the great Soul of Julius, who could not have undertaken an Enterprize more generous, and which was formed with no leſs Prudence than Magnanimity ; ſince he had politickly contrived that Barbarians ſhould encounter with Barbarians, and that Foreigners more than Italians ſhould ſpend their Blood againſt the French, by which Means he would not only ſave the Lives of his Countrymen, but, after he had driven out one of the Parties, leave it much eaſier to expel the other, already weakened and enervated, with the Arms and Forces of Italy."
        }
      ],
      "glosses": [
        "Grafía obsoleta de politicly."
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}
{
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    "Inglés"
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      "args": {
        "1": "sufijo",
        "2": "politick",
        "3": "ly",
        "leng": "en"
      },
      "expansion": "De politick y el sufijo -ly",
      "name": "etimología"
    }
  ],
  "etymology_text": "De politick y el sufijo -ly.",
  "extra_sounds": {
    "pronunciación": "falta agregar"
  },
  "forms": [
    {
      "form": "politickly",
      "tags": [
        "positive"
      ]
    },
    {
      "form": "more politickly most politickly",
      "tags": [
        "comparative"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "lang": "Inglés",
  "lang_code": "en",
  "pos": "adv",
  "pos_title": "adverbio",
  "senses": [
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      "examples": [
        {
          "example_templates": [
            {
              "args": {
                "1": "Theſe wicked Spirits, doubtleſs, are politically and politickly conſtituted, ſubordinated, and ſituated.",
                "a": "John Reynolds",
                "c": "libro",
                "f": "1723",
                "t": "Inquiries Concerning the State and Oeconomy of the Angelical Worlds",
                "url": "http://books.google.com/books?id=OYdPAAAAYAAJ&hl=es&pg=PA59"
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              "name": "ejemplo"
            }
          ],
          "ref": "John Reynolds. Inquiries Concerning the State and Oeconomy of the Angelical Worlds. 1723.",
          "text": "Theſe wicked Spirits, doubtleſs, are politically and politickly conſtituted, ſubordinated, and ſituated."
        },
        {
          "example_templates": [
            {
              "args": {
                "1": "It has always been the Humour of Men to look for truly great and unexceptionable Characters in ancient Times ; Neſtor frequently tells the Greeks in Homer, what ſort of Perſons liv’d when he was a Boy, and they were eaſily admitted to be far ſuperior to the greateſt and moſt excellent then alive ; and had he been three times as old as he was, he might have almoſt deify’d his Heroes ; but it is hard to be conceived, that a Set of Men could ever be choſen by the Cotemporaries to have divine Honours paid them, whilſt numerous Perſons were alive, who knew their Imperfections, and who themſelves or their immediate Anceſtors might have as fair a Pretence, and come in Competition with them : Alexander the Great had but ill Succeſs in his Attempt to make the World believe him the Son of Jupiter Ammon ; nor could Numa Pompilius, the ſecond King of Rome, make Rumulus’s Tranſlation to Heaven ſo firmly believ’d, as not to leave room for ſubſequent Hiſtorians to report him kill’d by his Subjects (c) ; nor can I conceive that Julius Cæſar’s Canonization, tho’ it was contrived more politickly, and ſupported with more ſpecious and popular Appearances, would ever have ſtood long indiſputable, if the Light of Chriſtianity had not appeared ſo ſoon after this Time, as it did, and impaired the Credit of the Heathen Superſtitions.",
                "a": "Samuel Shuckford",
                "c": "libro",
                "f": "1731",
                "t": "The Sacred and Prophane History of the World Connected",
                "url": "http://books.google.com/books?id=CpBYoiQDvWUC&hl=es&pg=PA287"
              },
              "expansion": ":*Ejemplo:\n::It has always been the Humour of Men to look for truly great and unexceptionable Characters in ancient Times ; Neſtor frequently tells the Greeks in Homer, what ſort of Perſons liv’d when he was a Boy, and they were eaſily admitted to be far ſuperior to the greateſt and moſt excellent then alive ; and had he been three times as old as he was, he might have almoſt deify’d his Heroes ; but it is hard to be conceived, that a Set of Men could ever be choſen by the Cotemporaries to have divine Honours paid them, whilſt numerous Perſons were alive, who knew their Imperfections, and who themſelves or their immediate Anceſtors might have as fair a Pretence, and come in Competition with them : Alexander the Great had but ill Succeſs in his Attempt to make the World believe him the Son of Jupiter Ammon ; nor could Numa Pompilius, the ſecond King of Rome, make Rumulus’s Tranſlation to Heaven ſo firmly believ’d, as not to leave room for ſubſequent Hiſtorians to report him kill’d by his Subjects (c) ; nor can I conceive that Julius Cæſar’s Canonization, tho’ it was contrived more politickly, and ſupported with more ſpecious and popular Appearances, would ever have ſtood long indiſputable, if the Light of Chriſtianity had not appeared ſo ſoon after this Time, as it did, and impaired the Credit of the Heathen Superſtitions.Samuel Shuckford. The Sacred and Prophane History of the World Connected. 1731.",
              "name": "ejemplo"
            }
          ],
          "ref": "Samuel Shuckford. The Sacred and Prophane History of the World Connected. 1731.",
          "text": "It has always been the Humour of Men to look for truly great and unexceptionable Characters in ancient Times ; Neſtor frequently tells the Greeks in Homer, what ſort of Perſons liv’d when he was a Boy, and they were eaſily admitted to be far ſuperior to the greateſt and moſt excellent then alive ; and had he been three times as old as he was, he might have almoſt deify’d his Heroes ; but it is hard to be conceived, that a Set of Men could ever be choſen by the Cotemporaries to have divine Honours paid them, whilſt numerous Perſons were alive, who knew their Imperfections, and who themſelves or their immediate Anceſtors might have as fair a Pretence, and come in Competition with them : Alexander the Great had but ill Succeſs in his Attempt to make the World believe him the Son of Jupiter Ammon ; nor could Numa Pompilius, the ſecond King of Rome, make Rumulus’s Tranſlation to Heaven ſo firmly believ’d, as not to leave room for ſubſequent Hiſtorians to report him kill’d by his Subjects (c) ; nor can I conceive that Julius Cæſar’s Canonization, tho’ it was contrived more politickly, and ſupported with more ſpecious and popular Appearances, would ever have ſtood long indiſputable, if the Light of Chriſtianity had not appeared ſo ſoon after this Time, as it did, and impaired the Credit of the Heathen Superſtitions."
        },
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                "1": "Many taken with the Speciouſneſs and Magnificence of the Title praiſed up to the Skies ſo high and noble a Project ; calling it a Profeſſion truly worthy of the pontifical Majeſty, and of the great Soul of Julius, who could not have undertaken an Enterprize more generous, and which was formed with no leſs Prudence than Magnanimity ; ſince he had politickly contrived that Barbarians ſhould encounter with Barbarians, and that Foreigners more than Italians ſhould ſpend their Blood againſt the French, by which Means he would not only ſave the Lives of his Countrymen, but, after he had driven out one of the Parties, leave it much eaſier to expel the other, already weakened and enervated, with the Arms and Forces of Italy.",
                "a": "Francesco Guicciardini",
                "c": "libro",
                "f": "1754",
                "t": "The History of Italy",
                "url": "http://books.google.com/books?id=Pic2AAAAMAAJ&hl=es&pg=PA291"
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              "expansion": ":*Ejemplo:\n::Many taken with the Speciouſneſs and Magnificence of the Title praiſed up to the Skies ſo high and noble a Project ; calling it a Profeſſion truly worthy of the pontifical Majeſty, and of the great Soul of Julius, who could not have undertaken an Enterprize more generous, and which was formed with no leſs Prudence than Magnanimity ; ſince he had politickly contrived that Barbarians ſhould encounter with Barbarians, and that Foreigners more than Italians ſhould ſpend their Blood againſt the French, by which Means he would not only ſave the Lives of his Countrymen, but, after he had driven out one of the Parties, leave it much eaſier to expel the other, already weakened and enervated, with the Arms and Forces of Italy.Francesco Guicciardini. The History of Italy. 1754.",
              "name": "ejemplo"
            }
          ],
          "ref": "Francesco Guicciardini. The History of Italy. 1754.",
          "text": "Many taken with the Speciouſneſs and Magnificence of the Title praiſed up to the Skies ſo high and noble a Project ; calling it a Profeſſion truly worthy of the pontifical Majeſty, and of the great Soul of Julius, who could not have undertaken an Enterprize more generous, and which was formed with no leſs Prudence than Magnanimity ; ſince he had politickly contrived that Barbarians ſhould encounter with Barbarians, and that Foreigners more than Italians ſhould ſpend their Blood againſt the French, by which Means he would not only ſave the Lives of his Countrymen, but, after he had driven out one of the Parties, leave it much eaſier to expel the other, already weakened and enervated, with the Arms and Forces of Italy."
        }
      ],
      "glosses": [
        "Grafía obsoleta de politicly."
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      "senseid": "1"
    }
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  "word": "politickly"
}
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable Inglés dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-07-09 from the eswiktionary dump dated 2024-07-01 using wiktextract (ad53249 and b4eb25b). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

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