Definition of Plenarily

1. Adverb. In a plenary manner. "An empire destined to enter the Commonwealth plenarily"

Partainyms: Plenary

Definition of Plenarily

1. adv. In a plenary manner.

Definition of Plenarily

1. Adverb. In a plenary manner. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Plenarily

1. [adv]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Plenarily

pleiotaxy
pleiotrophic
pleiotropic
pleiotropic gene
pleiotropies
pleiotropism
pleiotropy
pleisiomorph
pleisiomorphic
pleisiomorphs
pleistocene
pleitropic
plena
plenal
plenaries
plenarily (current term)
plenariness
plenarty
plenary
plenary court
plenary session
plenary speaker
plenary talk
plench
plenches
plenicorn
plenilunar
plenilunary
plenilune
plenilunes

Literary usage of Plenarily

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

1. The Plenary Inspiration of the Scriptures Asserted, and the Principles of by Samuel Noble (1825)
"... that this is absolutely the only way in which a revelation of Divine Truth—or• a plenarily inspired composition,— can be given, in natural language, ..."

2. The Journal of Sacred Literature by John Kitto, Henry Burgess, Benjamin Harris Cowper (1851)
"Now, Christ was himself universally, plenarily, ... he sanctioned them, as being like himself universally, verbally, and plenarily inspired. ..."

3. A Practical Arrangement of Ecclesiastical Law by Francis James Newman Rogers (1840)
"Summary are those in which such order is dis- Came». pensed with, although in these, if you proceed plenarily, the gumma proceedings are valid ; but if any ..."

4. Tertullian by Tertullian (1842)
"... and any one, daily confessing, may he daily and that plenarily absolved. The difficulty implies that the remedy was at least indefinite or rare, ..."

5. The Plenary Inspiration of the Scriptures Asserted, and the Principles of by Samuel Noble (1825)
"... that this is absolutely the only way in which a revelation of Divine Truth—or• a plenarily inspired composition,— can be given, in natural language, ..."

6. The Journal of Sacred Literature by John Kitto, Henry Burgess, Benjamin Harris Cowper (1851)
"Now, Christ was himself universally, plenarily, ... he sanctioned them, as being like himself universally, verbally, and plenarily inspired. ..."

7. A Practical Arrangement of Ecclesiastical Law by Francis James Newman Rogers (1840)
"Summary are those in which such order is dis- Came». pensed with, although in these, if you proceed plenarily, the gumma proceedings are valid ; but if any ..."

8. Tertullian by Tertullian (1842)
"... and any one, daily confessing, may he daily and that plenarily absolved. The difficulty implies that the remedy was at least indefinite or rare, ..."

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