English to Spanish Dictionary popularly

popularly

generalmente
definition
adverb
advancing age is popularly associated with a declining capacity for work
by many or most people; generally.
translation of 'popularly'
adverb
generalmente
example
Ostentatiously, a person's income dictates his ‘taste’, which is 'popularly' associated with his dress, the restaurants he frequents, and the people he associates with.
a 'popularly' elected Parliament
Built in 1650, it is attributed to a pir named Abdul Karim, who was more 'popularly' known as Sheikh Chehli among the local inhabitants.
This created a true parliamentary democracy, legalized political parties, and made provisions for a 'popularly' elected legislature.
advancing age is 'popularly' associated with a declining capacity for work
Her name is Muswachidah, or Idah as she is 'popularly' addressed.
In comparison to many sports that are widely and 'popularly' accepted in American culture, including football, cheerleading, hockey, boxing and basketball, mixed martial arts is relatively safe.
The role of information and communications technologies is 'popularly' held to be very critical to economic development.
Known 'popularly' by her first name, here was a woman who knew how the excesses of beauty and charisma could buy the trust of millions in order to validate the divide between the rich and poor.
Grieg's score is more extensive than is 'popularly' believed, and runs in its entirety to no fewer than 32 numbers, amounting to almost 90 minutes of music.
Quality of life is a term that is 'popularly' used to convey an overall sense of well being and includes aspects such as happiness and satisfaction with life as a whole.
Yudhoyono is banking on the compensation plan, plus his reputation as the country's first 'popularly' elected president, to prevent mass political action against the government.
Arabs were 'popularly' associated with moneylending, land and property ownership and close relations with the Dutch in Indonesia.
The new, transitional Iraqi government will not be 'popularly' elected, and will inevitably itself be deeply divided on these issues.
Being 'popularly' elected, it would be accountable to voters and hence enjoy considerable legitimacy.
This is the attraction of democracy, and this is the reason why democracy became a universal value and why democratic rights are 'popularly' supported and yearned for!
However, it is still 'popularly' called by its old name.
It was the complex impact of these exchanges between east and west that created the culture, art, and scholarship that have been 'popularly' associated with the Renaissance.
The current five-week winter break is the legacy of a former mini-semester called ‘January term,’ a name that is still 'popularly' used to refer to Macalester's winter break.
Secondly, I think, the polls or the most recent polls have shown that the majority of Australians do want to have a 'popularly' elected president.
In England, France, and generally on the Continent notions of legislative supremacy dictated that the 'popularly' elected parts of government were not to be restrained by appointed judges.
The field is still 'popularly' associated more with tents than texts: stones, bones, and potsherds.
As a ‘laughing gas’, it was widely abused and 'popularly' associated with ‘drunkenness’, in much the same way that aerosol-based nitrous oxide and ether-based glue are today.
Since then, the word has become 'popularly' associated with anti-colonial military activity.
Now it is important to realize that what is called Say's Law was in the first instance designed as a refutation of doctrines 'popularly' held in the ages preceding the development of economics as a branch of human knowledge.
During her lifetime, she wrote novels, plays, poetry, and philosophical meditations, but it is for her novels that she was most widely and 'popularly' known.
That said, this work is unlikely to be 'popularly' acclaimed or widely read, even though it has a good deal to tell us about changing French attitudes toward war and the social and political position of the army within French society.
The British forces in the Balkans are 'popularly' referred to in terms of ‘our boys’, in the spirit of the second world war.
It made him face up to a puzzle that Rowse explores: how to reconcile the functions of a professional public service with the necessities of a 'popularly' elected government.
The presence of this massive army of foreign soldiers cannot be justified in the presence of a 'popularly' elected government.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one