What's the difference between immemorial and immemorially?

Immemorial


Definition:

  • (a.) Extending beyond the reach of memory, record, or tradition; indefinitely ancient; as, existing from time immemorial.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) "Men have governed the world since time immemorial and what has the world been like?"
  • (2) Spinal cord injury resulting in paraplegia or tetraplegia has from time immemorial led to early death.
  • (3) The apostrophe has been missing since time immemorial.
  • (4) Rape has always happened in war since time immemorial, hasn't it?
  • (5) Unity Australia spokesman Terry Hall said in the lead up to the event: “Despite the suggestion of some counter-protest at the WA, Victorian and NSW events, we expect these to be peaceful and joyful occasions celebrating the way marriage has provided the best environment for the nurturing and protection of children since time immemorial.” A counter-protest had also been organised in the park, and about 50 protesters gathered there amid a large police presence.
  • (6) The Chinese people discovered ginseng and used it as a revitalizing agent since time immemorial.
  • (7) Then there's the problem of English-speaking actors doing German accents, the bane of movies about the world wars since time immemorial.
  • (8) Mercury has been used medically in the Middle East since time immemorial.
  • (9) Dining tables in particular have immemorial meanings.
  • (10) Nevertheless, Achebe absorbed the folk tales told to him by his mother and older sister, stories he described as having "the immemorial quality of the sky, and the forests and the rivers".
  • (11) This slightly arch disguise of a French alter ego allows Hawthorne to pretend that the story is another of his "finds", and so invests it with a kind of immemorial halo - a cautionary fable from ancestral wisdom.
  • (12) Since time immemorial the Chinese people have used various parts of motherwort to meet different physical needs.
  • (13) Dried fish has, from time immemorial, been an important item of the diet.
  • (14) There is an obvious reason for this: since time immemorial the rich have been averse to declaring their wealth.
  • (15) Men have been talking of death from time immemorial - sometimes sublimely in prose and poetry, in painting and sculpture and in music - till silence seemed to fall in the recent past.
  • (16) Craniofacial malformations have been recorded since time immemorial.
  • (17) "Mapmaking has helped them to assert their claims to the land by identifying exactly the areas they have lived since time immemorial," says the head of the Tebtebba foundation, Vicky Tauli-Corpuz.
  • (18) LS There have been grumpy shop encounters since time immemorial.
  • (19) It can be summarized by saying that lymphocytes have been destined from time immemorial to identify a specific antigen.
  • (20) In this paper, I have suggested that plasma membrane cell adhesion proteins that were involved in ontogenic organogenesis since time immemorial were the ultimate ancestor of the adaptive immune system.

Immemorially


Definition:

  • (adv.) Beyond memory.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) "Men have governed the world since time immemorial and what has the world been like?"
  • (2) Spinal cord injury resulting in paraplegia or tetraplegia has from time immemorial led to early death.
  • (3) The apostrophe has been missing since time immemorial.
  • (4) Rape has always happened in war since time immemorial, hasn't it?
  • (5) Unity Australia spokesman Terry Hall said in the lead up to the event: “Despite the suggestion of some counter-protest at the WA, Victorian and NSW events, we expect these to be peaceful and joyful occasions celebrating the way marriage has provided the best environment for the nurturing and protection of children since time immemorial.” A counter-protest had also been organised in the park, and about 50 protesters gathered there amid a large police presence.
  • (6) The Chinese people discovered ginseng and used it as a revitalizing agent since time immemorial.
  • (7) Then there's the problem of English-speaking actors doing German accents, the bane of movies about the world wars since time immemorial.
  • (8) Mercury has been used medically in the Middle East since time immemorial.
  • (9) Dining tables in particular have immemorial meanings.
  • (10) Nevertheless, Achebe absorbed the folk tales told to him by his mother and older sister, stories he described as having "the immemorial quality of the sky, and the forests and the rivers".
  • (11) This slightly arch disguise of a French alter ego allows Hawthorne to pretend that the story is another of his "finds", and so invests it with a kind of immemorial halo - a cautionary fable from ancestral wisdom.
  • (12) Since time immemorial the Chinese people have used various parts of motherwort to meet different physical needs.
  • (13) Dried fish has, from time immemorial, been an important item of the diet.
  • (14) There is an obvious reason for this: since time immemorial the rich have been averse to declaring their wealth.
  • (15) Men have been talking of death from time immemorial - sometimes sublimely in prose and poetry, in painting and sculpture and in music - till silence seemed to fall in the recent past.
  • (16) Craniofacial malformations have been recorded since time immemorial.
  • (17) "Mapmaking has helped them to assert their claims to the land by identifying exactly the areas they have lived since time immemorial," says the head of the Tebtebba foundation, Vicky Tauli-Corpuz.
  • (18) LS There have been grumpy shop encounters since time immemorial.
  • (19) It can be summarized by saying that lymphocytes have been destined from time immemorial to identify a specific antigen.
  • (20) In this paper, I have suggested that plasma membrane cell adhesion proteins that were involved in ontogenic organogenesis since time immemorial were the ultimate ancestor of the adaptive immune system.

Words possibly related to "immemorial"

Words possibly related to "immemorially"