Definition of Dyslogistically

1. [adv]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Dyslogistically

dyslalia
dyslectic
dyslectics
dyslexia
dyslexias
dyslexic
dyslexically
dyslexics
dyslipidaemia
dyslipidaemias
dyslipidemia
dyslipidemias
dyslogia
dyslogies
dyslogistic
dyslogistically (current term)
dyslogy
dysluite
dyslysin
dysmasesis
dysmature
dysmaturity
dysmelias
dysmelic
dysmenorrheas
dysmenorrheic
dysmenorrhoeal membrane

Literary usage of Dyslogistically

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William Smith (1880)
"When modern jurists were divided into the philosophical (dyslogistically, unhistorical), and the historical (dyslogistically, unphilosophical), schools, ..."

2. The Works of Jeremy Bentham by Jeremy Bentham, John Bowring (1839)
"... say for example a pecuniary advantage, as being the most ordinary and palpable, or, dyslogistically speaking, the most gross, — it is certain that the ..."

3. Journal of the Statistical Society of London by Statistical Society (Great Britain) (1881)
"He explained that he used the word unscientific not dyslogistically but only distinctively, the tendency he blamed being that to stray across the bounds of ..."

4. Dictionary of the Apostolic Church by James Hastings, John Alexander Selbie, John Chisholm Lambert (1915)
"... favour the interpretation of Jezebel which sees in the name a term of opprobrium applied dyslogistically to a heretical sect or form of doctrine. ..."

5. Works of Thomas Hill Green by Thomas Hill Green (1906)
"Accordingly he is set down as a ' Transcendentalist,' and all the loose connotation of that term, as it is now dyslogistically employed among us ..."

6. Methods of social reform and other papers by William Stanley Jevons (1883)
"... namely, that the experiments are performed merely for the purpose of gaining reputation or " notoriety," as they call it dyslogistically. ..."

7. The London Magazine by John Scott, John Taylor (1827)
"... It is certain that in the beginning of the world the tree of knowledge on the one hand, and a thirst for information dyslogistically called curiosity, ..."

8. The Book of Fallacies: From Unfinished Papers of Jeremy Bentham by Jeremy Bentham, Peregrine Bingham (1824)
"... as being the most ordinary and palpable, or, dyslogistically speaking, the most gross, —it is certain that the contemplation of this advantage must have ..."

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