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单词 culturally
释义

culturallyadv.

Brit. /ˈkʌltʃ(ə)rəli/, /ˈkʌltʃ(ə)rl̩i/, U.S. /ˈkəltʃ(ə)rəli/
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: cultural adj., -ly suffix1.
Etymology: < cultural adj. + -ly suffix1.
With regard or in relation to culture (in various senses).
1. Biology. With reference to culture or a culture (culture n. 3) of microoganisms, cells, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > laboratory analysis > processes > [adverb] > culturing
culturally1888
1888 Lancet 1 Dec. 1067/2 Culturally, differences of a marked character distinguished it from other streptococci.
1893 Daily Tel. 29 Sept. 4/6 A fatal case..is officially described as ‘culturally indistinguishable from true cholera’.
1908 Practitioner Jan. 68 There was a striking resemblance between the non-virulent strains of meningococci and ordinary gonococci, morphologically, culturally, and as regards their immunising power against virulent meningococci.
1949 H. W. C. Vines Green's Man. Pathol. (ed. 17) x. 219 Culturally, the organism can be successfully grown on media containing glycerine, on blood-serum, or on Dorset's egg-medium.
2004 Forest Ecol. & Managem. 196 313/2 Culturally identical isolates were sorted into groups and a record kept of those recognised as basidiomycetes.
2.
a. With reference to artistic and intellectual activity.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > branch of knowledge > humanistic studies > [adverb] > in relation to culture
culturally1889
1889 Temple Bar June 87 Each is an advance culturally and artistically on that below.
1938 D. Thomas Let. 31 Aug. (1987) 322 Only the huge price of a railway ticket from London to South Wales prevented him from coming to interview me culturally.
1965 W. R. Chalmers in T. A. Dorey & D. R. Dudley Rom. Drama ii. 46 The Romans felt themselves to be more culturally advanced than their neighbours.
1976 Scotsman 20 Nov. 4/5 She was not known as ‘one of the more culturally-minded members of the Royal Family’.
1997 Billboard (Nexis) 22 Feb. Musically and culturally, London dominates the south of England.
2004 A. King London Jrnl. i. i. 11 ‘Slumming’, whereby a culturally respectable reader takes pleasure in mass-market reading.
b. With reference to the culture of a particular society or group.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > customs, values, and civilization > a civilization or culture > [adverb]
culturally1905
1905 Amer. Anthropologist 7 351 The linguistically distinct but culturally related Yurok, Karok, and Hupa.
1921 R. A. S. Macalister Text-bk. European Archæol. I. v. 120 Communities may be culturally classified as hunters, pastors, and agriculturists, according to the means whereby the majority of their members obtain their livelihood.
1954 W. J. H. Sprott Sci. & Social Action vi. 104 Deviance is the departure on the part of participants from culturally expected rules of conduct.
1981 Antiquaries Jrnl. 61 168 Changes in the social structure of politically and culturally unrelated societies involved in..long-distance trade.
2003 Time Out N.Y. 4 Dec. 21 She makes field recordings at culturally rich locales such as a Lower East Side bagel shop staffed entirely by Turkmen Jews.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adv.1888
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