What is another word for pictorially?

Pronunciation: [pɪktˈɔːɹɪəli] (IPA)

There are various synonyms that one can use instead of the word "pictorially." Some of the possible alternatives include graphically, illustratively, visually, representationally, diagrammatically, iconically, emblematically, and symbolically. These terms refer to the visually expressive nature of something, representing it in a visual or graphic format. For instance, phrases like "represented symbolically" or "portrayed illustratively" convey the same meaning as pictorially. The choice of a synonym depends on the context and the effect that a writer wants to create on the reader. However, each alternative suggests a different meaning to some extent, and writers should thus be cautious when selecting a synonym so that they communicate accurately.

What are the hypernyms for Pictorially?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Pictorially

The Honourable Mr. Candytuft, Colonel Bones, Commissioner Thrush, and Dr. Mizzlemist, of Doctors' Commons, must be noted, as they have to be dealt with pictorially by Leech hereafter.
"John Leech, His Life and Work. Vol. 1"
William Powell Frith
At Strassburg Johann Mentelin had used woodcuts for diagrams in an undated edition of the Etymologiae of S. Isidore, printed about 1473, but the first producer of books pictorially illustrated was Heinrich Knoblochtzer, who worked from 1476 to 1484, and issued over thirty books with woodcuts.
"Fine Books"
Alfred W. Pollard
If your nose be long, or your limbs slender, or your waist thick around, they will be pictorially presented.
"Around The Tea-Table"
T. De Witt Talmage

Famous quotes with Pictorially

  • Try to live the war pictorially studying it in all its mechanical forms (military trains, fortifications, wounded men, ambulances, hospitals, parades, etc).
    Filippo Tommaso Marinetti
  • Every naturalism begins as involuntary naïveté. Initially, we cannot help thinking that the “order of things” is an objective order. For the first glance falls on the things and not on the “eyeglasses.” In the work of enlightenment, this first innocence becomes irretrievably lost. Enlightenment leads to the loss of naïveté and it furthers the collapse of objectivism through a gain in self-experience. It effects an irreversible awakening and, expressed pictorially, executes the turn to the eyeglasses, i.e., to one’s own rational apparatus. Once this consciousness of the eyeglasses has been awakened in a culture, the old naïveté loses its charm, becomes defensive, and is transformed into narrow-mindedness, which is intent on remaining as it is. The mythology of the Greeks is still enchanting; that of fascism is only stale and shameless. In the first myth, a step toward an interpretation of the world was taken; in simulated naïveté, an artful stupefaction (Verdummung) is at work—the predominant method of self-integration in advanced social orders.
    Peter Sloterdijk

Related words: pictorial representation, pictorial evidence, pictorial document, pictograms, pictorial language, visual representation, graphical representation

Related questions:

  • What is pictorially?
  • What is a pictorial representation?
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