adv. [f. prec. + -LY2.]

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  1.  In a manner analogous (to, with, something else).

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1646.  Sir T. Browne, Pseud. Ep., 106. Quadrupedes oviparous … have their joynts and motive flexures more analogously framed unto ours.

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1853.  T. Ross, trans. Humboldt’s Trav., III. xxv. 41. This word formed analogously with the words Tamanacu, Otomacu, etc.

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  2.  By, or in accordance with, analogy.

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1749.  P. Skelton, Deism Rev., vi. (T.). His unity or omnipresence, which you conceive but analogously and imperfectly.

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1857.  M. Hopkins, Handbk. Average, 354. Freight, which has been called the mother of wages, and, therefore, analogously, of those expenses which are incidental to the production of freight.

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