In "King Lear" there is a personage who may be very instructively compared with others of the same kind by the student of Shakespeare's mental development.
In reading "Hamlet" there is little opportunity of comparing it instructively with any of its predecessors.
The close parallelism between the office of president and that of king in the minds of the framers of the Constitution was instructively shown in the debates on the advisableness of restraining the president's action by a privy council.
Now, though pleasure in genere cannot be weighed in the scale against Intelligence, yet the pleasures and pains of Intelligence may be fairly and instructively compared with other pleasures and pains.
A complete and handy Manual of all the known Openings and Gambits, with a thorough analysis of each, its variations and defense, the more intricate of which are instructively carried out beyond the opening moves.
A complete and handy Manual of all the known Openings and Gambits, with a thorough analysis of each, its variations and defense, the more intricate of which are instructively carried out; beyond the opening moves.
On the one hand, one will find the old aristocratic British tradition in an instructively distorted state.
Germain Pilon’s Entombment may be instructivelycompared with Jean Goujon’s and others; the Magdalen here is an admirable figure.
A portrait medallion of Ludovico il Moro of Milan (also by this window) may be instructively compared with those in contemporary Italian paintings upstairs.
The crowded composition may be instructively compared with earlier and simpler examples of this subject; also, with Fra Bartolommeo, whose fine but complex arrangements rapidly resulted in such confused grouping.
Then the famous =*=Venus of Arles itself, a Greek original, which may be instructively compared with the replica or variant close to it.
Nor did he talk instructively about the beginnings of life and how humans were but slightly advanced simians.
After his shot he lectured instructively upon its faults.
The three Friends were favored most instructively to labor in the meeting for business.
There was a precious feeling, and we were glad in not having missed uniting with such spirits in passing an hour or two instructively together.
Some of the legends therein related may be instructively read in connection with the development of Witchcraft.
The two pictures mentioned may be instructively compared.
It was much more elaborate, and shows very instructively the rise of father-right.
But when the supply of food is exhausted, or by any cause is checked, sexual reproduction is resorted to, and this in a way that illustrates most instructively the differentiation of the female and male cells.
Footnote 84: Nowhere is the relation between men and the Gods, and the all-covering variety of divine agency, in ancient Grecian belief, more instructivelyillustrated than in the Hippolytus of Euripides.
The paramount necessity of limiting the number of children born in each family, here enforced by Plato and Aristotle, rests upon that great social fact which Malthus so instructively expounded at the close of the last century.
The eighth chapter, fifth Book, of Aristotle's Nikomachean Ethics, discusses this question more instructivelythan Plato.
In a letter of his to Matthisson, as early as 1800 accompanying a copy of Adelaide, we may instructively gather what he thought of this matter: "Indeed even now I send you Adelaide with a feeling of timidity.
It illustrates instructivelysome of the speculative points of view, and speculative transitions, suggesting themselves to an inquisitive intellect of that day.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "instructively" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.