Sentence examples for which chiefly means from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

To survive, the high street will need to focus on all the things that cannot be done online – which chiefly means, things that involve the body or the social self.

Similar(59)

Despite Jefferson's revision of Locke, property (which chiefly meant land) remained the precondition for happiness: it protected against the temptations of corruption, freed the self for inquiry and contemplation and, through the mechanisms of inheritance, fostered a sense of connection to the past and to posterity.

Bose said that Zilingo doesn't pressure its merchants to use Zilingo.com for consumers sales — although it is obviously preferential — which means it has a potential that allows it to start working with those who are on rival services, which chiefly includes Rocket Internet's well-funded Zalora business.

Looking forward, Samsung said that it will maintain its improved year-on-year results despite increased competition as "other companies release new mobile devices" — that chiefly means Apple, of course, which is said to be targeting a mid-September reveal for its next iPhone.

In particular, Riney said that 500 Startups will work with CJF to open up opportunities for its portfolio companies further down the line: that chiefly means funding.

Increasing both lens voltages chiefly means trading a lower primary ion current for increased lateral resolution.

Kersten skips over Darrow's childhood, arguing that earlier biographers have made too much of it, by which he means, chiefly, Irving Stone.

Which means that you get classic French dishes alongside interesting "fusion" fare (sorry, just experienced a random attack of the late-1990s there) and some crowd-pleasing curveballs by which I mean, chiefly, a black pudding and Scotch egg salad.

Time was, "pre-" chiefly meant "before," as in prewar or prepubescent.

The chef, Jean-Philippe Patruno, offers food that is chiefly Spanish, which means it takes seamlessly to the small-plates form.

Drawing from his own and others' ideas, Abramsky proposes a host of potential remedies, chiefly by government as the great mobilizer of financial resources for the "commons," by which he means common good, common assets and common sense.

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