Microhistorically vs Microhistory - What's the difference?
microhistorically | microhistory | Derived terms |
(history) The study of the past on a small scale, such as an individual neighborhood or town, as a case study for general trends
*{{quote-news, year=2009, date=September 13, author=Daphne Merkin, title=Dame of the British Interior, work=New York Times
, passage=What is certain is that in “The Pattern in the Carpet,” Drabble eschews both chronology and raw autobiographical revelation for a more meandering approach that touches briefly on family pathology and private pain as it crisscrosses the centuries and unfolds the microhistory of jigsaw puzzles, an English invention, circa 1767. }}
Microhistorically is a derived term of microhistory.
As a noun microhistory is
(history) the study of the past on a small scale, such as an individual neighborhood or town, as a case study for general trends.microhistorically
Not English
Microhistorically has no English definition. It may be misspelled.English words similar to 'microhistorically':
microcirculatory, microclimatology, microspectroscopy, macroeconomically, microcanonically, micrographically, microcalorimetry, microcosmography, microcrystallinity, macrocrystallinity, macrocirculatory, macrographicallymicrohistory
English
Noun
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