The Collaborative International Dictionary
Academically \Ac`a*dem`ic*al*ly\, adv. In an academical manner.
Wiktionary
adv. In an academic style or way; from an academic perspective. (First attested in the late 16th century)Brown, Lesley, ed. ''The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary.'' 5th. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
WordNet
adv. in regard to academic matters; "academically, this is a good school"
Usage examples of "academically".
As a result, we did well academically and ended up going to Harvard over and over again, like addicts.
The point is that even if it does not survive as it once did, Orientalism lives on academically through its doctrines and theses about the Orient and the Oriental.
The whole middle expanse of Asia was not academically conquered for Orientalism until, during the later eighteenth century, Anquetil-Duperron and Sir William Jones were able intelligibly to reveal the extraordinary riches of Avestan and Sanskrit.
That is my opinion as an honest scholar, viewing the question academically and on its merits.
The more academically based astronomers regarded these as rather showy, unserious pursuits.
It includes thousands of academically rigorous and research inclined discussion groups which morph with intellectual trends and fashionable subjects.
Orin was basically academically sound, especially for a somebody with a top-level competitive sport on his secondary transcript.
Short Beach CT and under enormous family pressure to continue the male Axford tradition of attending Yale and is academically so marginal that he knows his only chance to go to Yale is to play tennis for Yale, which would effectively blow any chance at a Show-level future, and is high-ranked but has set his competitive sights on nothing past a Ride-offer to Yale.
Neither Joel nor I excelled academically, and both of us, as we realized on our ride into Rochester two decades earlier, were used to being on the outside looking in.
In spite of the fact that she had done well academically in law school, she had never taken her bar exams and was, nt fact, working as a sort of ornamental legal assistant to a firm of corporation attorneys down in St Paul, I think she was glad to give up the pretense of going to the office every day and simply take over as my wife.
I told them I was somewhat more advanced academically than I was, and they believed me, and my tutors, in their letters of recommendation, being good fellows, were kind enough not to disabuse them of this illusion.
Academically it was one of the finest prep schools in the country.
Maybe from a large family, comfortable with sharing, good at team sports in school, academically proficient without being a scholar, they just drift toward it.
He was still too weak to share in the chores everyone did, but Mary immediately began tutoring him to bring him up to Zane's level academically, since the two boys were the same age, as near as they could tell.