Defn: Added or placed between the parts of another thing, as a clause inserted parenthetically in a sentence.
Having stated parenthetically the effect of dishonouring and honouring Himself, Christ returns to the proof of His divine power.
In speaking of the end God had in view in conferring the supreme judiciary power upon the God-man, our Lord had noted parenthetically the effect of not honouring the Son (verse 23); here He adds what the effect of honouring Him is.
Both, it may parenthetically be observed, relieve Antinous from a moral stigma, since in either case a pure untainted victim was required.
It may be parenthetically observed, that Signorelli has introduced himself and Niccolo Angeli, treasurer of the cathedral building fund, in the corner of the fresco representing Antichrist, with the date 1503.
It may be remarked parenthetically that a committee of this kind had been in existence since the end of 1808, and had worked out a "plan of reform" akin in spirit to the projects of the Quadrennial Diet and the Parisian Synhedrion.
Parenthetically it may be remarked that this law was never applied in practice.
May I parenthetically observe that certain gentlemen want to give orders where they have no right to speak?
The January day in which I had to work was short; and I may parenthetically observe, although the fact is trivial, that I did not allow myself time to eat a mouthful of food.
Regarding fugitives or passportless wanderers in general, I may here remark parenthetically that there were two kinds.
In reality, be it parenthetically remarked, a Russian with a superabundance of ready money is a phenomenon rarely met with in real life.
With all due deference to Russian economists, I may say parenthetically that they are very found of juggling with carelessly collected statistics, as if their data were mathematical quantities.
Parenthetically it is to be observed that no such discovery had been made, and Varbarriere was merely fishing for information without disclosing his ignorance.
An expression used parentheticallyshould be inclosed by commas: "The old man, as a general rule, takes a morning walk.
The mark is often used parenthetically to suggest doubt: "In 1893 (?
Parenthetically it might be added that the former work contains in its prelude a highly ingenious solo for the rarely heard saxophone.
Parenthetically we may remark that "gravitation" has not yet exhibited any similar kind of finite property; and that is why we know so little about it.
Parenthetically I may say that this is precisely what happens, on Fresnel's theory, down the axis of a water-filled telescope exposed to the general terrestrial ether drift.
Two examples of the way matters were inserted parenthetically in the text of Deuteronomy, with a view to its fuller explanation, we have already given, in speaking of Aben Ezra's opinion.
The Sermintese or Serventese, it may be parenthetically said, was a form of satirical and occasional lyric adapted from the Provencal Sirvente.
And here it may be parenthetically noticed that the Italians, in the middle ages, created no feminine ideal analogous to Gudrun or Chriemhild, Iseult or Guinevere.
It may here be parenthetically remarked that Francesco Bello, a native of Ferrara, called Il Cieco because of his blindness, recited his Mambriano at the Mantuan Court of the Gonzagas.
It may be remarkedparenthetically that the possession of a gigantic brain had not obviated, in the case of the moralist, the deleterious effects of sour wine.
Added or placed between the parts of another thing, as a clause inserted parenthetically in a sentence.
Mr. Stombaugh, I now hand you a homemade paper bag, Commission Exhibit 142, which parenthetically has also received another Exhibit No.
Did you also furnish me with a photograph of the two prints you identified--which parenthetically were the only two identifiable prints--on the brown wrapping paper bag?
Where, in quoting a passage, we throw in parenthetically something of our own, we may use square brackets.
A complete sentence occurring parenthetically in a paragraph is sometimes placed within brackets.
Adjective clauses and contracted adjective clauses are marked off by commas, if they are used parenthetically or co-ordinately; no point is used if they are used restrictively.
It may here be parenthetically said that the rank and pay of an Italian captain varied with the number of the men he brought into the field.
It may here be parenthetically mentioned that the courtly poet, when he applied himself to this species of composition, invented a certain rusticity of incident, scarcely in keeping with the spirit of his art.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "parenthetically" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: apropos; incidentally; offhand; passing