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Nationally   /nˈæʃənəli/  /nˈæʃnəli/   Listen
Nationally

adverb
1.
With regard to a nation taken as a whole.
2.
Extending throughout an entire nation.  Synonyms: across the country, across the nation, nationwide.  "It was broadcast nationwide"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Nationally" Quotes from Famous Books



... of this book is to call attention to the literary and artistic values inherent in the South, and to the essentially unique and yet nationally interesting qualities of the Carolina Low Country, its landscapes and legends, the labor bestowed here ...
— Carolina Chansons - Legends of the Low Country • DuBose Heyward and Hervey Allen

... strange new self-abnegation of the English—their attitude not so much of suppressing their private griefs as of refusing to obtrude them. A strongly individualistic people, they were already commencing to think nationally. Grief was a private matter, to be borne privately. To the world they must present an unbroken front, an unshaken and unshakable faith. A new attitude, and a strange one, ...
— The Amazing Interlude • Mary Roberts Rinehart

... easy to recognize in them father and son,—a father and son whom it would be hard to match. "The finest type of the Anglo-Saxon race I have seen from America," was the verdict pronounced upon Mr. Ercildoune, when he was a young man studying abroad, by an enthusiastic and nationally ignorant Englishman; "but then, sir," he added, "what very dark complexions you Americans have! ...
— What Answer? • Anna E. Dickinson

... passion for equality. We are standardized, turned out like Fords by the hundred million, and we cannot endure for long anyone who is not standardized. Such an one casts reflections upon us; why should we by our votes unnecessarily asperse ourselves? Occasionally we may indulge nationally, as men do individually, in the romantic belief that we are somebody else, that we are like Roosevelt or Wilson—and they become typical of what we would be—but always we come back to the knowledge that we are nationally like Harding, ...
— The Mirrors of Washington • Anonymous

... Irishman. A Scotchman might be proud of Scotland; it was enough for an Irishman that he could be fond of Ireland. Our success with the two nations has been exactly proportioned to our encouragement of their independent national emotion; the one that we would not treat nationally has alone produced Nationalists. The one nation that we would not recognise as a nation in theory is the one that we have been forced to recognise as a nation in arms. The Scottish Patriotic Association has no need to draw my attention ...
— All Things Considered • G. K. Chesterton


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