The Collaborative International Dictionary
Linguistically \Lin*guis"tic*al*ly\, adv.
In a linguistic manner; from the point of view of a linguist.
--Tylor.
Wiktionary
adv. 1 In the manner of linguistics. 2 From a linguistic perspective.
WordNet
adv. with respect to the science of linguistics; "linguistically interesting data"
with respect to language; "linguistically impaired children"; "a lingually diverse population" [syn: lingually]
Usage examples of "linguistically".
Linguistically the Apache belong to the great Athapascan family, which, according to the consensus of opinion, had its origin in the far North, where many tribes of the family still live.
I am saying that specific experiences, themselves linguistically structured in many ways, are not captured in signifiers without a corresponding lifeworld signified.
Weapemeoc Indians, native to what is now North Carolina, were, linguistically, part of the Algonquin nation and were related to the Powhatans, the Chowans and the Pamlico tribes in the Mid-Atlantic portion of the United States.
The Yuchi, he points out, are racially and linguistically different from other North American tribes.
But similar things, historically and linguistically undocumented, though conjectured by archaeology, must have occurred in the course of the celticizing of Britain.
And in a sense, each of them is quite right: the ego does exist in the context of the total organism and its drives, which does exist in the context of its linguistically disclosed world, which does exist in terms of overall networks of social practices, which themselves subsist in Spirit.