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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Clinically

Clinically \Clin"ic*al*ly\, adv. In a clinical manner.

Wiktionary
clinically

adv. 1 In a clinical manner; dispassionately or analytically. 2 In the setting of a medical clinic; in a clinical setting.

WordNet
clinically

adv. in a clinical manner; "she is clinically qualified"

Usage examples of "clinically".

Clinically, it is looking more and more like viral hemorrhagic fever, and no one knows what to do for these people.

Yet almost everybody agrees that distilled water tastes awfulexcept for people who sell home water distillers and some friends of mine who are clinically paranoid about chemicals in their environment.

Clinically, now, Roberta had the same genitalia and urological equipment as most other women.

She found herself observing, clinically, even as hands tore at her, fists pummelled her, blurred faces lunged at her with gobs of spit.

The control section, with its banks of desks and flickering information processors was totally, clinically bare.

There was also a suspicion, as yet unproved clinically, of a link between certain fertility drugs and subsequent ovarian cancer.

I searched for something else to say, but it felt as if I had been clinically drained of the potential for resistance.

I can clinically doubt her recollections of a conversation such as she reported here today.

Therefore I can clinically doubt her recollections of a conversation such as she reported here today.

Those corpsicles who had survived the treatment-twenty-two of them, out of thirty-five attempts-had been clinically alive for some ten months, conscious f or shorter periods.

O'Connor, and the dates those tests were first described in clinically practi­cal terms: X ray: chest and abdomen (1905-15) White cell count (about 1895) Serum acetone (1928) Amylase (1948) Calcium (1931) Phosphorus (1925) SCOT (1955) LDH (1956) CPK (1961) John O'Connor 45 Aldolase (1949) Lipase (1934) CSF protein (1931) CSF sugar (1932) Blood sugar (1932) Bilirubin (1937) Serum albumin/globulin (1923-38) Electrolytes (1941-6) Electrocardiogram (about 1915) Prothrombin time (1940) Blood pH (1924-57) Blood gases (1957) Protein-bound iodine (1948) Alkaline phosphatase (1933) Watson-Schwartz (1941) Creatinine (1933) Uric acid (1933) If one were to graph these tests, and others com­monly used, against the total time course of med­ical history, one would see a flat line for more than two thousand years, followed by a slight rise be­ginning about 1850, and then an ever-sharper rise to the present time.

Lenz was diagnosed clinically claustrophobic and took prescription medication for anxiety and ensconcement-phobias, and she ended up successfully filing a Seven-Figure suit against Greyhound Lines and the almost-defunct Commonwealth Highway Authority for psychiatric trauma, public mortification, and second-degree frostbite, and received such a morbidly obese settlement from the Dukakis-appointed 18th-Circus Civil Court that when the check arrived, in an extra-long-size envelope to accommodate all the zeroes, Mrs.

Thom used the 'spinner' attached to the Jeep's steering wheel, a device that enabled him to turn the wheel using his right hand only, his left arm still weakened from the stroke - the 'cerebrovascular accident', as the clinically cold medical profession liked to name it.

Schemata, critical path analyses, clinically plotted intersections from his side of the strategic planning.

Had not Dr Wapenshaw shown him, Hogg, off as an exemplary cure, inviting colleagues of all nations to prod and finger and smile and nod and ask cunning questions about Hogg's relationship with his Muse and his stepmother and his lavatory and his pseudo-wife, cooling all that turbulent past to the wan and abstract dignity of a purely clinically interesting case to be handled by fingers smelling of antiseptics?