0 in a strange, and sometimes unpleasant, way: --
1 very or especially: --
She's a peculiarly attractive woman.
2 very or specially: --
3 typical of; characteristically: --
He identifies this social practice as peculiarly Irish.
In 1543 an earth-centered cosmos was the physical orthodoxy of the day, supported by philosophical arguments that, at the time, were peculiarly compelling.
He would, for a start, immediately recognize an attempt to grasp the nature of civic decency under peculiarly modern duress.
On its face, postal policy appears to be an area of public policy peculiarly well suited for congressional control.
The potential threat of murine schistosomiasis has tended to be regarded as a peculiarly guadaloupean problem with little relevance for control programmes elsewhere.
The mountains and valleys, whether surrounding the northern slate quarries, the rural hill farms, or the industrialized south, generated a peculiarly intense environment.
All that can be generally asserted is that the use of nationality as a significant source of political identity is peculiarly modern.
He commented that the tropical lowlands hold a peculiarly invisible status in the country's social, academic, and national thought.
At this point, however, it must be asked whether there is a peculiarly legal problem of content.