Hence, though sewer air is popularly held responsible for conveying diphtheria and all sorts of other virulent bacteria, there is up to the present no evidence of a substantial nature in support of such views.
The second classification, relating to differentiated style of orchestration, is popularly divided into three groups, but a division into four groups would seem more appropriate to the present writer.
He is popularly known as the heir of Weber, and has been called the connecting link between Weber and Wagner.
Music] Again, many peculiarities popularly regarded as Grieg's exclusive property constitute in reality the fundamental characteristics of the original source from which he has drawn his inspiration.
Such men as Gilmore, Sousa and Innes have done more for the cause of good music than is popularly supposed.
The third movement brought about a secret order called the American Protective Association, popularly known as the A.
They displayed an amazing aptitude for political plotting and organization and for that prime essential to political success popularly known as "mixing.
The celebrated raider is popularly believed to have destroyed the lives of all those whom he met, and to have reduced to an uninhabited desert the whole region from the Yang-tzA- River to Peking.
Inflammation of the larynx is a serious and sometimes fatal disease, and, as before stated, is usually complicated with inflammation of the pharynx, constituting what is popularly known as "sore throat.
This affection, popularly termed bone spavin, is an exostosis of the hock joint.
A similar power, notwithstanding his own disclaimer, was popularly attributed to the Platonist Apuleius.
Many curious charms are still practised to ward off that unpleasant sensation popularly known as nightmare, which both in this and other countries has given rise to a variety of superstitions.
This distemper has been popularly called "St. Anthony's Fire," from the legend that it was miraculously checked by that saint when raging in many parts of Europe in the eleventh century.
The origin popularly assigned to this widespread superstition is the fact that thirteen was the number at the Last Supper, Judas being the thirteenth.
Bellarmino--these three Popes being ill-affected toward the order--were popularly ascribed to their agency.
Whistling a little tune of the type popularly known as jazz she shut off the motor and came up the front steps, letting herself in with a latchkey.
The old man is not (so far as I could learn), really insane in the popularly accepted sense of the word.
When I got there, I found that they have an old Chapel attached to the castle which has had quite a distinguished reputation for being what is popularly termed 'haunted.
I most say furthermore that those criminals who are known to me are not, as is also popularly supposed, the scum of their environment.
The sleep or trance with which hypnotism is popularly identified is not essential to our object, for the subliminal modifications are sometimes attained without any trace of somnolence.
The false leaves, termed cladodia, are the linear or hair-like organs which are popularly called leaves; they are in reality modified branches.
Maps and admiralty charts call it Ram Head, but the real name is Ceann-a-Rama and popularly it is often styled Ardmore Head.
A most distinctive class of ancient Irish literature, and probably the class that is least popularly familiar, is the hagiographical.
Popularly it is supposed to be his grave and within it is a hollow space scooped out, wherein it is said his ashes once reposed.
Miscarriage is the term popularly used for the accidental loss of the products of conception.
This was the chosen ground of both parties, and a more popularly intelligible ground could not be taken.
It was formed of the three crosses of St. Patrick, Saint Andrew, and Saint George, and is that popularly known to us as "the Union Jack.
From the place of meeting', this Convention was popularly called "the Back Lane Parliament.
Sorcery was adopted as a profession, and witches, not, as is popularly supposed, sporadic growths, were trained in schools of magic to practise their art.
It will be remembered that Rousseau like Weishaupt held that the Golden Age of felicity did not end in the garden of Eden, as is popularly supposed, but was prolonged into tribal and nomadic life.
It is customary in this country to say that we should respect the Jewish religion, and this would certainly be our duty were the Jewish religion founded, as is popularly supposed, solely on the Old Testament.
It is popularly and correctly held that the smile is the weapon of the silent.
All this is popularly known and is abnormally believed in, so that we often discover that the deformed are more frequently suspected of crime than normal people.
When the question involves the sense of hearing some misunderstanding may be popularly assumed.
It is characteristic, as is popularly known, that memory can be intensified by means of special occasions.
It may be that the judgment of the correctness of an inference is made analogously to that of numbers and that the latter exercise an influence on the judgment which is as much conceded popularly as it is actually combated.
This essentially notable and not clearly understood circumstance is popularly familiar.
It is popularly supposed that these are just the men of highest education, and that on that very account they have the preference in nominations to different offices.
The form with smooth tall trunks with upright branches usually has more heart wood, splits more easily and is popularly distinguished as red beech.
The species that mature their fruit the first year are popularly and commercially classed as "white oaks.
The tamarack is popularly classed as white and yellow--the yellow being considered the better of the two.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "popularly" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.