These are word's examples related to sociologically. Click on any word to go to its word's detail page. Or, go to the definition of sociologically.
Sociologically speaking, the home is the social unit which develops the patterns of mind and attitude.
Our projects are technologically simple but sociologically complex.
It remains to be seen whether the more sociologically oriented sociolinguists, which this book in a way represents, will finally take that road.
Second, more sociologically informed research looks beyond statistical analysis to reveal interesting information about the contextual or situational factors that shape opinions.
My work - though also sociologically and institutionally oriented has been conducted largely on the macroscopic level.
What images of science, society, and sociological method undergirded their attempts to study scientific knowledge sociologically?
But there are those who more readily, if not enthusiastically, would utilize immunology to explain ourselves, sociologically.
We wanted to establish approximately what it means to engage with an object archaeologically or sociologically.
Sociologically, this is not so trivial as it sounds.
Geographically, sociologically and demographically, it is close to the ideal for a population laboratory.
What one finds is a brief synthesis stating simply that ' race is not a biologically, genetically, anthropologically or sociologically meaningful concept ' (p. 19).
Sociologically, it is the means of identification among the members of the community to which he belongs.
Primary repair must be considered psychologically, sociologically and economically advantageous.
The obvious question such an analysis brings up, however, is to what extent such forms of social construction are sociologically viable.
Anthropologists have frequently been skeptical about the validity of a spatially and sociologically distinct urban entity.
Risager maintains that while languages may be psychologically related to a particular culture and cultural experiences of individuals, they are sociologically separate from other cultural phenomena.
Recently published revisionist literature has constructed a sociologically realistic portrayal of a professional musician working among other musicians for a contemporary audience in a specific historical context.