Definition of concretely in English:
concretely
adverb ˈkɒnkriːtliˌkənˈkritli
1In a definitive or conclusive way.
a very real need to think concretely about the issues
Example sentencesExamples
- Imagine my surprise to find an article by two consultants that concretely describes what I had only vaguely felt.
- Arguments over the range grew out of ideas about property and more concretely how they bear upon who gets what.
- Perhaps indeterminacy is easier to talk of in the abstract than to analyze concretely.
- The first law to be concretely utilized was the one for the election of the mayors.
- A prestigious publication more easily establishes the value of the idea and concretely illustrates the project's practicality.
- Short-term collaboration among small groups of service-providing agencies emerged around concretely defined, shared goals.
- Even if the advantages are difficult to be evaluated concretely, they may provide a trade-off between code manageability and loss of resources.
- More concretely, the Internet does pose plenty of problems for non-English speakers.
- Content can be matched to therapy issues analogically as well as concretely.
- These cases are useful in illustrating more concretely industry's response to the changing environment of Asia Pacific following the crisis.
- 1.1 In a way that is material or physical.
these moments are captured concretely and indelibly on film
Example sentencesExamples
- They have developed a charting technique by which the juvenile can concretely visualize the events and feelings leading up to firesetting.
- I will present an integrated approach to treating addictions and will apply it concretely stage by stage.
- Was there literally an instruction to the artists that there has to be something overtly, concretely muscular happening in each image?
- The clam chowder might have put the institution on the map, but its oyster stew connects it concretely to the place—the oyster beds are just around the point.
- In later research, the group established that synesthesia is not only consistent across time but also concretely measurable in the brain.
- The film contains some excellent little neighborhood shots, but nothing that concretely places the flick in the Windy City.
- When someone consumes a house, they do concretely record a tax deduction on their 1040 and pay less taxes.
- Engaging in conceptual or philosophical (rather than concretely architectural) experiments, she forces architecture to examine the importance of temporality.
- His talent has always been more aural than lyrical, but he's never shaped his sounds more concretely than here.
- In very real ways, the costs of production have been concretely mapped onto the human body—in the form of broken limbs, crushed skulls, and crippling.
Definition of concretely in US English:
concretely
adverbˌkənˈkrētlēˌkənˈkritli
1In a definitive or conclusive way.
a very real need to think concretely about the issues
Example sentencesExamples
- More concretely, the Internet does pose plenty of problems for non-English speakers.
- A prestigious publication more easily establishes the value of the idea and concretely illustrates the project's practicality.
- Even if the advantages are difficult to be evaluated concretely, they may provide a trade-off between code manageability and loss of resources.
- Arguments over the range grew out of ideas about property and more concretely how they bear upon who gets what.
- Perhaps indeterminacy is easier to talk of in the abstract than to analyze concretely.
- Imagine my surprise to find an article by two consultants that concretely describes what I had only vaguely felt.
- These cases are useful in illustrating more concretely industry's response to the changing environment of Asia Pacific following the crisis.
- Content can be matched to therapy issues analogically as well as concretely.
- The first law to be concretely utilized was the one for the election of the mayors.
- Short-term collaboration among small groups of service-providing agencies emerged around concretely defined, shared goals.
- 1.1 In a way that is material or physical.
these moments are captured concretely and indelibly on film
Example sentencesExamples
- In later research, the group established that synesthesia is not only consistent across time but also concretely measurable in the brain.
- They have developed a charting technique by which the juvenile can concretely visualize the events and feelings leading up to firesetting.
- When someone consumes a house, they do concretely record a tax deduction on their 1040 and pay less taxes.
- I will present an integrated approach to treating addictions and will apply it concretely stage by stage.
- His talent has always been more aural than lyrical, but he's never shaped his sounds more concretely than here.
- Was there literally an instruction to the artists that there has to be something overtly, concretely muscular happening in each image?
- In very real ways, the costs of production have been concretely mapped onto the human body—in the form of broken limbs, crushed skulls, and crippling.
- Engaging in conceptual or philosophical (rather than concretely architectural) experiments, she forces architecture to examine the importance of temporality.
- The clam chowder might have put the institution on the map, but its oyster stew connects it concretely to the place—the oyster beds are just around the point.
- The film contains some excellent little neighborhood shots, but nothing that concretely places the flick in the Windy City.