Ethnography vs Ethnographically - What's the difference?
ethnography | ethnographically |
(anthropology) The branch of anthropology that scientifically describes specific human cultures and societies.
regarding the ethnography (of a region)
* {{quote-book, year=1913, author=Sir James George Frazer, title=The Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead, Volume I (of 3), chapter=, edition=
, passage=[274] Hence the Western Islanders of Torres Straits form a transition both geographically and ethnographically between the aborigines of Australia on the one side and the aborigines of New Guinea on the other side. }}
* {{quote-news, year=1994, date=October 28, author=Jeff Huebner, title=Art People: Luke Dohner's reverential rip-offs, work=Chicago Reader
, passage=Straws are just one of the unconventional but commonplace items Dohner uses in addition to traditional materials like ceramic, glass, and wood in his series of witty, ethnographically inspired works now on view at Ten in One Gallery. }}
As a noun ethnography
is (anthropology) the branch of anthropology that scientifically describes specific human cultures and societies.As an adverb ethnographically is
regarding the ethnography (of a region).ethnography
English
(wikipedia ethnography)Noun
(ethnographies)Synonyms
* descriptive anthropologyHolonyms
* anthropologyExternal links
* *ethnographically
English
Adverb
(-)citation
citation