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Separately   /sˈɛpərətli/  /sˈɛprətli/   Listen
Separately

adverb
1.
Apart from others.  Synonyms: individually, on an individual basis, one by one, severally, singly.  "The fine points are treated singly"





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"Separately" Quotes from Famous Books



... rapidly getting better, and in less than ten days who should appear at the hospital but Sir Henry Elmore himself. He went round the wards and spoke separately to each of the wounded men belonging to the Ruby, and then he came to Paul Pringle and had a long talk with him. Paul thought that in a few days he should be sufficiently recovered to leave the hospital and get as far as his own home, at the pretty village of ...
— True Blue • W.H.G. Kingston
 
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... be very fresh, into a deep sauce-pan half full of boiling water, seasoned with a teaspoonful of salt, and half a gill of vinegar; cover the sauce-pan, and set it on the back part of the fire until the whites of the eggs are firm; then lift them separately on a skimmer, carefully trim off the rough edges, making each egg a regular oval shape, and slip them off the skimmer into a bowl of hot, but not boiling water, where they must stand ...
— The Cooking Manual of Practical Directions for Economical Every-Day Cookery • Juliet Corson
 
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... described, separately or collectively, gradually increase; the children finally take to their bed and now the real cerebral ...
— Prof. Koch's Method to Cure Tuberculosis Popularly Treated • Max Birnbaum
 
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... never exactly paint the delightful creature who stood before me." Comment on either of these should be quite needless. Again: "Her nose, by a happy and bold curve, joined itself to the lobes, lightly expanded, of her diaphanous nostrils." Did it never occur to the man that a nose, separately considered from its curve and its nostrils, is terribly like that of La Camarde herself? I wasted some time over the tedious trilogy of Un Debut a L'Opera, M. de Saint Bertrand, Le Mari de la Danseuse. ...
— A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2 - To the Close of the 19th Century • George Saintsbury
 
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... establishment, it is impossible to write like the musician, in score, and to make all the parts of the narrative advance together. Various movements, which exist together, and which have the most intimate connection and dependence upon each other, must nevertheless be described separately; and the greatest care and attention, and frequently no small share of address, are necessary in the management of such descriptions, to render the details intelligible; and to give the whole its full effect of order;—dependence;— connection;—and harmony. And in no ...
— ESSAYS, Political, Economical and Philosophical. Volume 1. • Benjamin Rumford
 
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