What's the difference between customarily and ordinarily?

Customarily


Definition:

  • (adv.) In a customary manner; habitually.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The formal results of the analysis show that when psychological considerations are incorporated into a state-dependent utility model, the normative results customarily obtained concerning value-of-life need to be qualified.
  • (2) This method permits direct measurement of the effects of low doses of radiation and other mutagens without resort to the controversial extrapolation procedure customarily used to estimate effects of doses in the neighborhood of actual human exposures.
  • (3) For examples of a successful legacy we are customarily steered towards the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester, even though, as always seems to be glossed over, the organisers faced a £100m shortfall with just weeks to go and had to be bailed out by Sport England (£30m), the government (£30m) and Manchester City Council (£40m).
  • (4) The orthodontically treated group had a significantly higher percentage of even marginal ridges in the teeth that are customarily banded.
  • (5) You would not find Keir customarily in wing collar and stripy trousers."
  • (6) The thickness of the cortex did not reflect this difference but in younger animals the process of osteonal remodelling seemed further advanced in the cortex which was customarily subject to the larger deformation.
  • (7) Estrogen stimulation of the uterus produces a spectrum of biochemical responses that are customarily linked together.
  • (8) Examiners in clinical control programs customarily undergo an intensive period of training to standardize their interpretation of diagnostic criteria.
  • (9) Under such circumstances lesions resembling silicotic nodules may be found, but with the customarily lower levels of quartz the pathological features assume the form characteristic of coal workers.
  • (10) This protein is fixed by phosphate-buffered formalin or glutaraldehyde at pH 7.3, but the label is diminished by fixation in customarily employed acetic ethanol or in formalin at acid pH.
  • (11) In a preliminary field trial in the Caribbean, the skin test proved to be somewhat less sensitive than the customarily used extract of adult worms in Coca's solution.
  • (12) A new, easy-to-operate HALO fitting device is described and compared with devices customarily used up to the present time.
  • (13) This finding suggests that lower or less frequent doses than are customarily used might be equally efficacious.
  • (14) A lateral rhinotomy incision is employed and when necessary, this exposure is increased by extending the incision of split the upper lip and reflect the cheek flap as is customarily done with the Weber-Ferfusson incision.
  • (15) The three-dimensional localization of these electrodes within the myocardium and the subsequent depiction of the data obtained have customarily been performed manually.
  • (16) Differentiation of a chondrosarcoma customarily has an adverse effect on the prognosis with both the early appearance of metastases and a rapidly fatal clinical course.
  • (17) In a study of necropsies at Yale-New Haven (Conn) Hospital from 1972 to 1981, the necropsy detection rates for lung cancer were slightly higher for women than for men, and were substantially higher for both genders than the customarily reported rates in the general population.
  • (18) It is probable that learning to read depends in part upon the ability to establish an association between a seen object (customarily perceived within the right hemisphere) and a verbal symbol (mediated by the left).
  • (19) Most surgeons have customarily recommended conservative management, especially for patients in Group II, because of the supposedly "high risk" involved in decortication.
  • (20) Forty animals in each dose group were then maintained for 5-38 weeks on the complete diet (diet 1) or one of the three methyl-deficient diets customarily used in this laboratory: diet 2, devoid of methionine and choline; diet 3, devoid of methionine only; and diet 4, devoid of choline only.

Ordinarily


Definition:

  • (adv.) According to established rules or settled method; as a rule; commonly; usually; in most cases; as, a winter more than ordinarily severe.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Conversion of S180 cells to a communication-competent phenotype by transfection with a cDNA encoding the cell-cell adhesion molecule L-CAM induced phosphorylation of connexin43 to the P2 form; conversely, blocking junctional communication in ordinarily communication-competent cells inhibited connexin43-P2 formation.
  • (2) A modified CWS technique using an external pulse generator (pulse width = 40 msec) ordinarily used for transcutaneous cardiac pacing was tested in 74 patients (40 with unipolar and 34 with bipolar DDD devices).
  • (3) This pulse converts the phase distribution of the subject, ordinarily a linear function of image coordinates, into a nonlinear function.
  • (4) Antibody to purified ATPase has now been used to demonstrate that membrane vesicles as ordinarily prepared by the lysozyme-EDTA method consist of two distinct populations.
  • (5) In clinical trials its efficacy is equivalent to that of other quinolones and it is at least as effective as other antibacterial drugs ordinarily used in these infections.
  • (6) However, at Na+ levels used ordinarily to culture the alga ([Na+] = 11.7 mM), the total amount of phage adsorbed was doubled in the illuminated cultures, as compared with the dark-grown ones, over a wide range of multiplicities of infection (0.05 to 20).
  • (7) These rearrangements created a composite exon resulting in the expression of the ordinarily unexpressed delta gene sequence and conferred the hybrid proteins with new antigenic specificities.
  • (8) In addition, during regeneration, optic nerve glia express large amounts of the 50 kDa cytoskeletal protein, which they ordinarily express at only minimal levels.
  • (9) The data indicate furthermore that in this model, inhibition of RNA or protein synthesis can induce rather than inhibit apoptosis, suggesting that the synthesis inhibitors disrupted primarily the synthesis or action of enzymes ordinarily aimed at repairing DNA fragmentation.
  • (10) Mannitol intoxication is ordinarily characterized by confusion, lethargy, stupor, and if severe enough, coma.
  • (11) While this method is not suitable for distributions that involve extremely small cell counts or that deviate markedly from a symmetric Gaussian, it has additional advantages of loose requirements, namely, narrow fitting regions, ordinarily small cell counts, practical computational periods and a simple programming.
  • (12) This determinant is ordinarily obscured in the undamaged antigen.
  • (13) In these patterns can be identified: (a) conspicuous behaviors, idiosyncratic for the individual, which often yield to psychoanalytic inquiry to reveal their dynamic-historical antecedents; and (b) inconspicuous background kinesics, habitual to the individual, which ordinarily are opaque to analytic exploration, yet hold rich meaning.
  • (14) Aromatic amines and related compounds, some of which are taken up and released from nerve terminals, might act at brain receptors ordinarily stimulated by traditional amine neurotransmitters.
  • (15) The renal inner medulla is ordinarily exposed to osmolalities that are much higher and to O2 tensions that are lower than those in other tissues.
  • (16) following spontaneous rupture of acute, free wall myocardial infarcts created pericardio-pleural fistulae with resultant relief of pericardial tamponade, thus permitting cardiac contractions to occur after they naturally and ordinarily would have ceased.
  • (17) Mannitol, though ordinarily a benign substance, may accumulate in renal failure with potentially deleterious consequences.
  • (18) A homeless person is someone "who lacks a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence" and whose main nighttime residence is a "supervised public or private shelter designed to provide temporary living accommodations; an institution that provides a temporary residence for individuals intended to be institutionalized; or a public or private place not designed for, or ordinarily used as, a regular sleeping accommodation for human beings."
  • (19) They lack the site that is ordinarily modified by pertussis toxin and their sequences vary from the canonical Gly-Ala-Gly-Glu-Ser (GAGES) amino acid sequence found in most other G protein alpha subunits.
  • (20) The peak effect was always seen during the stages at which sympathetic neuronal synaptogenesis and impulse activity ordinarily undergo their most rapid development.