reciprocally
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From reciprocal + -ly.
Adverb
[edit]reciprocally (comparative more reciprocally, superlative most reciprocally)
- In a reciprocal manner; by way of returning (e.g. a favour, insult, etc).
- Antonym: irreciprocally
- 1891, Karl Marx, translated by Frederick Engels, Wage Labour and Capital:
- In the process of production, human beings work not only upon nature, but also upon one another. They produce only by working together in a specified manner and reciprocally exchanging their activities.
- 1997, David Lipset, Mangrove man: dialogics of culture in the Sepik estuary, page 72:
- When younger brother calls [his elder brother's wife] his "co-wife" and reciprocally, when she calls him co-husband," rights in sexuality are being satirized.
- 2006, Constantin V. Boundas, Deleuze and Philosophy, →ISBN, page 160:
- Responding to this in confusion, perhaps you construct an Idea, a structure, a multiplicity, a system of multiple, nonlocalisable ideal connections which is then incarnated. It is incarnated in real (not ideal) relations and actual (physical) terms, each of which exists in relation to each other, reciprocally determining each other.
Translations
[edit]in a reciprocal manner
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