generically in English

adverb

in a generic manner, in a nonspecific manne

Use "generically" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "generically" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "generically", or refer to the context using the word "generically" in the English Dictionary.

1. Acid Chlorides are also known generically as acyl Chlorides

2. Of his models (by then generically known as Autogiros, and often spelled “autogyros”)

3. Betatrons, transverse oscillations in accelerators are known generically as betatron oscillations

4. Alclad is a trademark of Alcoa but the term is also used generically.

5. From the early 3rd century the title was applied generically to all bishops.

6. Generically, what we use the Web for is to organize, exchange, create and consume information.

7. Note: the term “filter“ in figure # refers generically to whatever air pollution control system is appropriate

8. Furanocoumarins are a subgroup of phenolic compounds included in the coumarins group. They can be subdivided into two types: linear, generically known as psoralens, among which are included psoralen, xanthotoxin, and bergapten, and angular, generically known as Angelicins, including angelicin, sphondin, and pimpinellin.

9. Aristocrat Leisure Limited or simply Aristocrat, as it has generically come to be known, is a public Australian company with its headquarters in Sydney

10. Though they belong to a variety of different tribes, the Bantu refugees in the United States generically refer to themselves as the Bantu.

11. The word Bedlam came to be used generically for all psychiatric hospitals and sometimes is used colloquially for an uproar

12. This name has also been applied, more generically, to other aboriginal groups of the lower Sungari and lower Amur basins.

13. Compounds having one, two or three @[email protected] on a given nitrogen are generically included and may be designated as primary, secondary and tertiary Amides, …

14. The term Champagne is also applied generically, with restrictions, outside France, to many white or rosé wines that are characterized by

15. Relenza, known generically as zanamivir, is the other drug recommended for use against H1N1 and is made by GlaxoSmithKline under license from Australia's Biota.

16. In minting, Coining or coinage is the process of manufacturing coins using a kind of stamping which is now generically known in metalworking as " Coining "

17. Commingled funds are a type of, and are sometimes referred to as, pooled funds.Although the term can be used generically as in, "a mutual fund uses a …

18. Compounds having the general structure or are called "Azines" generically and are named substitutively as derivatives of diazane or as an assembly of identical units using the prefix "azino-"

19. Bellman uses the ff and group crates to build circuits generically over a scalar field type, which is used as the "word" of a circuit

20. Although ‘Cashpoint’ would be a fitting way to describe such machines generically, it is a trade name that has seeped into the English language for more general use.

21. Aloofin so in restrict our attention access maps which are we have no reluctance now refer strong generically order; as well i relation parallel element turn is forever

22. Androcentrism refers to cultural perspectives where the male is generically taken to be the norm of humanness. Androcentrism originates from a male monopoly on cultural leadership and the shaping and transmission of culture.

23. THE SWINGING Barmaids is a generically plotted but thoroughly entertaining ‘psycho killer murders cocktail waitresses’ film which, despite favoring T&A over bloodshed, still offers decent tension along with plentiful footage of the valley c

24. While the Arabic اللّٰه ‎ (allāh) is used generically to refer to God in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic contexts, current English usage almost always restricts the corresponding term Allah to Islamic contexts only

25. Filmed in the artist's studio, the dancers enact a series of sprezzatura gestures Bossily choreographed by an off-camera Bronstein, whose commands are only just audible against the sound track of generically insistent electronic music

26. (1) The chemical substance identified generically as a Brominated aromatic compound (PMN P-84-824) is subject to reporting under this section for the significant new uses described in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.

27. Since 1520s, like Jack, it has been used generically, as a common Appellative of lads and servants, as the name of a typical man of the common folk, of a Scottish or North Country seaman, etc.

28. Eighteen times, authors reference gods generically as “Baals.” For example, Jer 9:10-16 says that Yahweh will destroy Jerusalem and scatter the people because they “have gone after the Baals.” How can Baal be so many gods?

29. Bibliolatry is the worship of a particular book or worshiping the description of a deity found within a particular book.' And while this is generically true, the fact remains that those who authored this, are not devout disciples of Messiah Yeshua

30. A powder-Actuated tool (PAT, often generically called a Hilti gun or a Ramset gun after their manufacturing companies) is a type of nail gun used in construction and manufacturing to join materials to hard substrates such as steel and concrete

31. The current debate over Brainwashing (the term is used here generically to refer to mind control, coercive persuasion, or thought reform unless otherwise stipulated) is best understood in the broader context of recurrent concerns through Western history over powerful, illicit sources of influence on individual loyalty and commitment.

32. As nouns the difference between Copolymer and nylon is that Copolymer is (chemistry) a polymer derived from more than one species of monomer while nylon is originally, the (dupont) company trade name for polyamide, a Copolymer whose molecules consist of alternating diamine and dicarboxylic acid monomers bonded together; now generically used for this type of polymer.

33. The range is wide both Chronologically and generically, from Judge Daniel Horsmanden's account of the "legal" handing and burning at the stake of thirty-one slaves and free blacks accused of conspiring to burn and loot New York City in 1741, to slave narratives, and to extensive treatment of works by Delany, Chesnutt, Hopkins, Johnson, Schuyler

34. Bodega (n.) 1846, "wine shop," from Mexican Spanish, from Spanish Bodega "a wine shop; wine-cellar," from Latin apotheca, from Greek apotheke "depot, store" (see apothecary).Since 1970s in American English it has come to mean "corner convenience store or grocery," especially in a Spanish-speaking community, but in New York City and some other places used generically.