different between glaringly vs taxonomy

glaringly

English

Etymology

glaring +? -ly

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /??l?????li/, /??l?????l?/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /??l????li/

Adverb

glaringly (comparative more glaringly, superlative most glaringly)

  1. In a glaring manner:
    1. (literally) With intense light.
      • 1947, Malcolm Lowry, Under the Volcano, New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, Chapter 5,[1]
        [] the light now on, now off, now on too glaringly, now too dimly, with the glow of a fitful dying battery—then at last to know the whole town plunged into darkness []
      • 1958, Robert A. Heinlein, Have Space Suit—Will Travel, New York: Ballantine, 1977, Chapter 7, p. 114,[2]
        The ground was covered with snow, glaringly white even under that pinpoint Sun.
      • 2011, Alan Hollinghurst, The Stranger’s Child, London: Picador, Part Four, Chapter 1,
        After dusk in Bedford Square you could see into the high first-floor windows of publishers’ offices, the walls of bookshelves and often a huddle of figures at a glaringly lit party.
    2. (figuratively) So as to be highly visible or obvious; so as to attract notice or attention.
      The error was glaringly obvious, yet nobody said anything about it.
      • 1782, Frances Burney, Cecilia, London: T. Payne & Son, and T. Cadell, Volume 4, Book 7, Chapter 9, p. 133,[3]
        Cecilia was quite confounded by this speech; to have it known that Delvile had visited her, was in itself alarming, but to have her own equivocation thus glaringly exposed, was infinitely more dangerous.
      • 1847, Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights, Chapter 22,[4]
        ‘How can you lie so glaringly to the poor child?’ I called from the inside.
      • 1901, H. G. Wells, The Sea Lady, London: Methuen, 1902, Chapter 3, Part I, p. 72,[5]
        To find the reporters hammering at their doors, so to speak, and fended off only for a time by a proposal that they should call again; to see their incredible secret glaringly in print, did indeed for a moment seem a hopeless exposure to both the Buntings and the Sea Lady.
      • 1999, J. M. Coetzee, Disgrace, Penguin, 2000, Chapter Three, p. 24,
        Her accent is glaringly Kaaps;

Synonyms

  • (so as to be highly obvious): blatantly, plainly; see also Thesaurus:obviously

Translations

glaringly From the web:

  • glaringly meaning
  • what does glaring mean
  • what does glaringly obvious mean
  • what do glaring mean
  • what is glaringly bright
  • what does glaring mean in english
  • what does glaringly vivid mean
  • what means glaringly bad


taxonomy

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French taxonomie. Surface analysis taxo- +? -nomy.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /tæk?s?n?mi/
  • (US) IPA(key): /tæk?s??n?mi/
  • Rhymes: -?n?mi

Noun

taxonomy (countable and uncountable, plural taxonomies)

  1. The science or the technique used to make a classification.
  2. A classification; especially, a classification in a hierarchical system.
  3. (taxonomy, uncountable) The science of finding, describing, classifying and naming organisms.

Synonyms

  • taxonomics
  • (science of finding, describing, classifying and naming organisms): alpha taxonomy

Coordinate terms

  • nomenclature
  • ontology

Derived terms

Translations

taxonomy From the web:

  • what taxonomy means
  • what taxonomy are humans
  • what taxonomy do humans belong to
  • what taxonomy is not a type of taxonomy
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