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germanely

American  
[jer-mayn-lee] / dʒərˈmeɪn li /

adverb

  1. in a way that is germane or relevant to the topic or issue under discussion.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Enjoy Garner’s wonderfully waspish essay on aging ungracefully, which manages to germanely quote both Marilynne Robinson and Dirty Harry?

From New York Times

Its sunny cousin, “California life style,” appeared around the same time, as a phrase but, more germanely, as a hope.

From The New Yorker

More germanely, the radical reforms it pushed through after the 2007-8 debacle were - to state the obvious - designed to ward off the last crisis, but cannot be a prophylactic against all crises.

From BBC

And more germanely to this point, why don’t teams do things like this all the time?

From Forbes

Perhaps more germanely, the ability of Scotland to borrow in its own right would remain heavily constrained.

From BBC