These savings are technically 'capital' and their owners 'capitalists' to that extent, and this is supposed to contradict the statement of Marx that property concentrates into few and fewer hands.
When a file possesses curved points, or caps, as they are technically termed, a few strokes upon a narrow surface will cause them to break off, reducing the depth of the teeth and causing the cuttings to clog in them.
This also gives too broad a length of cutting edge and causes the file to vibrate on the forward or cutting stroke, an action that is technically known as chattering, and that obviously impairs its cutting capacity.
The most common method istechnically termed by the forgeman, 'finishing the piece before him.
The clerk who hears this remark makes a note of it and sends through to the comparison department what is technically known as a customer's complaint.
But not, of course, until the clerical young man technicallyknown as the sheet-writer has made a record of it.
Round these compartments are double lines, similarly marked, for the odds, or proportions, between what is technicallyknown as the main and chance.
He says nothing about the proximity of other boats, armed or otherwise; and so the Americans would appear to have been technically guilty of the initial breach of neutrality.
Muir in this page is apocryphal and technically Mursal.
Those who held that "the people of the Book" ought only to be made tributaries, while all other idolaters and polytheists should be compelled either to perish or to embrace Islam, interpret the word technically to mean the religion of Islam.
He was not a contemporary narrator, therefore his narration is apocryphal and technically Mursal.
The Italian Pantomime had two peculiar features; a species of buffoonery technically termed Lazzi, and one of a more extraordinary nature, the extempore dialogue of its comedy.
This drawer-on was also technically termed a puller-on and a shoeing-horn in drink.
These, according to Riccoboni, consist of nothing more than the skeletons of Comedies; the canevas, as the French technically term a plot and its scenes.
He wasn't a criminal, but until the hospital released him, he was technically a mental case.
Once he had worked there, technically he still did.
Strictly speaking, this makes what is technicallyknown as a "cased" book, i.
Formerly it was the practice of some binders to sew in a way technically called "two-on.
The difference between water, technically known as hydrogen monoxide, and the antiseptic fluid labeled hydrogen dioxide lies wholly in the possession by the latter of an extra atom of oxygen in its molecules.
In other words, we have an effeminate man, technically a eunuch.
Technically speaking, each of these counts is regarded (though all of them really are only varied descriptions of one and the same offence) as containing the charge of a distinct offence.
The ground, when plowed for cotton, is thrown into a series of ridges by a process technically known as "four-furrowing.
This apartment is technically known as the "lint-room," and presents an interesting scene while the process of ginning is going on.
HOLY WATER, technically the water with which Christian believers sign the cross on their foreheads on entering or leaving church.
Footnote 3-28: Although essentially correct, the critics were technically inaccurate since some Negroes would be assigned to Coast Guard cutters which qualified as sea duty.
The Gesell Committee enjoyed no such advantage, although the Truman order was technically still in effect and could have been used to support it.
The technically unqualified but still "usable" men would be reassigned to black service units.
In contrast to the Army's policy of separate but equal service for its black troops, the Navy's postwar racial policy was technically correct and essentially in compliance with the President's order.
The Army was planning for the enlistment of a large cross section of the population through some form of universal military training; the Navy was planning for a much smaller peacetime organization of technically trained volunteers.
Black pilots were at first trained exclusively for pursuit flying, a very difficult kind of combat for which a Negro had to qualify both physically and technically or else, in Judge (p.
The Navy continued to exclude many potential black volunteers on the grounds that it needed to maintain stricter mental and physical standards to secure men capable of running a modern, technically complex Navy.
In a period of reduced manpower allocations and increased demand for technically trained men, these services came to realize that racial distinctions were imposing unacceptable administrative burdens and reducing fighting efficiency.
Technically the Steward's Branch was open to all, but in practice it remained strictly nonwhite.
One is practically restricted to Liszt in this direction, but finds in him a mine of highly finished, admirably set gems, accessible, though technically not easy to appropriate.
This is at once the saddest, the deepest, and the most descriptive, while technically the easiest, of all the Chopin nocturnes.
Although technicallyeasy and thoroughly musical, this little work is strangely enough but little played.
The sonata as a whole is one of the most interesting productions of Beethoven's second period, and is technically within the reach of most good amateurs.
The term "pestilential" was technically applied to a kind of fever a degree worse than the "malignant.
Since your love of music is strong enough to cause you to resume your playing you should take as much pleasure in it as possible and work technically only in the pieces you play--that is, in those places which offer you difficulties.
In the first attempts at a new piece must matters of conception be observed at once or only after the piece has been technically mastered?
I mean by this that you should now apply aesthetically what you have technically gained in the morning by uniting your mechanical advantages with the ideal conception which you have formed in your mind of the work you are studying.
The distinction between form and colour is onlytechnically important, and does not affect artistic perception and production.
Labbayka," the crytechnically called "Talbiyah" and used by those entering Meccah (Pilgrimage iii.
You arrive at Cut Bank at seven o'clock on the evening of the second, having complied with the law, technically at least, and are ordered to deadhead back to Havre on No.
Concretely, it costs about two dollars a ton for package-freight (known technically as the classified) to get itself unloaded upon a Manhattan Island pier.
Technically this last is known as "saturated steam.
Technically he adopted the oil medium brought to Venice by Antonello da Messina, introducing scumbling and glazing to obtain brilliancy and depth of color.
Societies and painters began to spring up all over the country, and as a result there is in the United States to-day an artist body technically as well trained and in spirit as progressive as in almost any country of Europe.
Technically he was not strong as a draughtsman or a brushman, but he had a large feeling for form, great simplicity in line, keen perception of the relations of light and dark, and at times an excellent color-sense.
Painting simply developed and became forceful and expressive technically without abandoning its early character.
Technically it had its shortcomings, but it conveyed the proper information to its beholders and was serviceable and graceful decoration for Egyptian days.
Technically his was a master-hand, doing all things with ease, giving exact relations of colors and lights, and placing everything so perfectly that no addition or alteration is thought of.
Technically he was more of a sculptor than a painter.
The poetry of the school is his, and technically he is fine in color at times, if often rather dark in illumination.
Technically he is rather labored and heavy in handling, but usually effective with sombre color in giving the unity of a scene.
That painting technicallywas at a high point of perfection as regards the figure, even the imitative Roman works indicate, and it can hardly be doubted that in spirit it was at one time equally strong.
Technically the work begins to decline from the beginning in proportion as painting was removed from the knowledge of the ancient world.
The result was something popular, but not original or far-reaching, though technically well done.
Otis may have been technically wrong in resisting the Writs of Assistance, but it can scarcely be questioned that as a philosophic politician, who was devoted to the interests of his countrymen, he was ethically in the right.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "technically" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.