orthodoxly


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or·tho·dox

 (ôr′thə-dŏks′)
adj.
1. Adhering to the accepted or traditional and established faith, especially in religion.
2. Adhering to the Christian faith as expressed in the early Christian ecumenical creeds.
3. Orthodox
a. Of or relating to any of the churches or rites of the Eastern Orthodox Church.
b. Of or relating to Orthodox Judaism.
4. Adhering to what is commonly accepted, customary, or traditional: an orthodox view of world affairs.
n.
1. One that is orthodox.
2. Orthodox A member of an Eastern Orthodox church.

[Middle English orthodoxe, from Old French, from Late Latin orthodoxus, from Late Greek orthodoxos : Greek ortho-, ortho- + Greek doxa, opinion (from dokein, to think; see dek- in Indo-European roots).]

or′tho·dox′ly adv.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive ?
A still relatively uncharted portion of this "poem" would be dramatic, a genre with which Felipe was naturally involved and which encroaches even on his more orthodoxly lyrical work.
In other words, Scott may share my own ambivalence about disciplinarity: whether it really is just as good as "transdisciplinarity." Perhaps I made it too easy to think that I wanted to move beyond "transdisciplinarity," back to a more orthodoxly disciplinary view.
order", explicitly points out the fact that the book is orthodoxly