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Discover LudwigThe word 'pervasively' is correct and commonly used in written English
It means to exist or spread throughout an entire area or system in a pervasive manner. One example of using 'pervasively' in a sentence could be: "The smell of freshly baked cookies pervasively filled the entire house, making everyone's mouths water."
Dictionary
pervasively
adverb
In a pervasive manner, such that a thing is present in all parts.
Exact(60)
A scathing 335-page report from a year-long probe was released on July 17th by the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations".HSBC's compliance culture has been pervasively polluted for a long time," said Senator Carl Levin, who chairs the committee.
(That sum, by the way, is equivalent to between one-quarter and one-half of the government's budget deficit).Though it is impossible to be precise, that direct burden is almost certainly as nothing compared with the broader economic costs caused by the government's interfering so pervasively in the allocation of resources.
In 2014 this will begin to transform not only the operations but also the model and purpose of the firm.Our world has become pervasively instrumented and interconnected, with computation infused into things nobody would think of as a computer.
Less spectacularly but more pervasively, corruption, incompetence and foolish economic policies can often be relied on to squander any amount of donor cash.
In fact, tolerance for off-field foibles seems to be in precipitous decline, perhaps because the advent of social media allows outrage to spread much more pervasively.
Although precision bombs helped in 1991, the availability of cheap, all-weather varieties meant they were used much more pervasively and successfully this time.
In Jacques Monod's phrase, natural selection is chance caught on a wing.Mr Fortey says that Darwin's view of the natural world informs his narrative as pervasively as grammar does a novel.
Totalitarian is a label generally applied to the most pervasively controlling regimes (Nazi Germany, Stalinist Russia, Maoist China, North Korea).
They are mostly basalts and impact breccias, but many are pervasively altered and rich in sulfates and hydrated minerals.
Over the following four centuries it supplied one of the most pervasively influential designs for church building.
Although hocket technique generally is found in short passages (often at the endings of sections or phrases) within a larger composition, it is used pervasively in the 14th-century French composer Guillaume de Machaut's "David," in which the two upper voices sing in hocket above a slower moving tenor.
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