In fact, there is no modernly discovered practical motive power but what has been found less expensive both as to time and money than horse power.
What was very anciently called "brass" was no doubt gold-coloured copper; for what is modernly known as brass was not made until after the discovery of zinc in the 16th century and its combination with copper.
It is modernly used as a luxury by those who are able to combine with it other means for heating.
Stockholm is more scientifically advanced, and more modernly wide-awake than are the German and English cities of to-day.
There are also spacious docks in Hamburg, convenient and modernly equipped, where, year by year, gathers an increasing shipping to fetch and carry the rapidly developing foreign commerce of the German Empire.
But the schools and University of Copenhagen aremodernly equipped.
A till is more modernlycalled a "lob," and stealing from tills is known as "lob-sneaking.
More modernlythe term is supposed to mean an undertaker, or any one engaged in or concerned with burials.
Which only shows that we are prone to plant ourselves on the sound traditions of ancestors; for where is the aristocracy which does not regard wealth won by ancient thievery as better than money modernly earned in a commonplace way?
What honourable-we except the modernly chivalrous-man would see his children jostled by the ruffian trader?
Nor is he of the modernly pious-that is, as piety professes itself in our democratic world, where men use it more as a necessary appliance to subdue the mind than a means to improve civilization.
But more modernly the names were transferred to men.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "modernly" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.