Definition of chronologically in English:
chronologically
adverb krɒnəˈlɒdʒɪk(ə)liˌkrɑnəˈlɑdʒɪkli
In a way that follows the order in which events or records occurred.
the essays are arranged chronologically
the narrative moves chronologically
Example sentencesExamples
- He meanders roughly chronologically through his life but permits himself to digress when an incident or thought spurs a tangential memory.
- I have selected six paintings ranging chronologically from 1963 to 1995, the year of the artist's death.
- The best way is to start chronologically, from the very beginning.
- The chronologically arranged survey began with his small Cubist-inspired paintings of the 1950s.
- These can only be more precisely dated through stylistic comparison with more chronologically secure Egyptian works.
- I watch all his films chronologically every year.
- The dates sweep chronologically from the mid-19th century to the present.
- The entries are arranged chronologically, with no art-historical or social-historical context to bind the works or warrant such an organization.
- Composing a personal essay does not mean achieving perfect recall and transcribing it chronologically onto the page.
- The second disc contains the next four episodes released chronologically in the fall of 1951.
Definition of chronologically in US English:
chronologically
adverbˌkrɑnəˈlɑdʒɪkliˌkränəˈläjiklē
In a way that follows the order in which events or records occurred.
the essays are arranged chronologically
the narrative moves chronologically
Example sentencesExamples
- The chronologically arranged survey began with his small Cubist-inspired paintings of the 1950s.
- These can only be more precisely dated through stylistic comparison with more chronologically secure Egyptian works.
- Composing a personal essay does not mean achieving perfect recall and transcribing it chronologically onto the page.
- The dates sweep chronologically from the mid-19th century to the present.
- The entries are arranged chronologically, with no art-historical or social-historical context to bind the works or warrant such an organization.
- I watch all his films chronologically every year.
- He meanders roughly chronologically through his life but permits himself to digress when an incident or thought spurs a tangential memory.
- The best way is to start chronologically, from the very beginning.
- The second disc contains the next four episodes released chronologically in the fall of 1951.
- I have selected six paintings ranging chronologically from 1963 to 1995, the year of the artist's death.