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A2

partly English

Meaning partly meaning

What does partly mean?

partly

(= partially, part) in part; in some degree; not wholly I felt partly to blame He was partially paralyzed

Synonyms partly synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as partly?

Topics partly topics

What do people use partly to talk about?

Examples partly examples

How do I use partly in a sentence?

Simple sentences

I partly agree with you.
It is made partly of wood.
The wall is partly covered with ivy.
This means that our perception of any situation depends only partly on sensory signals being received at that time.
I can follow you partly.
I can't help but feel partly responsible.
This mountain is composed of molasse, which is partly covered by moraine material.
We were partly right.
Yesterday morning, I harvested my potatoes. Because of the rain, they were partly rotten.
It was partly my fault.
Tom was partly right.
Tom knows he's partly to blame.
The idea of clowns frightening people started gaining strength in the United States during the 1970s, partly because of John Wayne Gacy.
I'm sorry. I'm partly responsible for it.
This road was partly destroyed in consequence of the earthquake.
The road was partly destroyed in consequence of the earthquake.
His death was partly my fault.
I was partly right.
What Tom says is only partly right.
It's partly your fault.
It's partly my fault.
Yesterday in the morning, I was harvesting potatoes. Because of the rain they were partly rotten.
Tom is partly right.

Movie subtitles

The seaweed should be spread and partly dried in the sun before being burned.
You're partly Egyptian, aren't you? Yes.
Partly inference, partly chance.
The men and women of this state elected me partly because I was instrumental in the sentencing of Blackie Gallagher to the electric chair.
Partly. I was born in Bourges.
Well, yes, partly.
Partly?
Well, partly that then, because I wasn't sure.
Whether it's partly bubbles or entirely lack of oxygen.
A cold heart, partly reduced in size.
Partly.
Partly to satisfy my opinion and partly for the satisfaction, look you, of my mind.
Partly my fault.
I brought my army here partly from anger, mostly from love.
It's partly the same, alphabet substitution code.
But there's something else that needs sorting out, for which I feel partly responsible.
Lassiter was recruited from the Officers Training School at U.C.L. A. partly because ofhis superior knowledge of French.
Partly, yes.
You're partly to blame for that.
And because the secret door was left partly open.
My method is based partly on calling a spade a spade.
Well, that makes him partly yours too, doesn't it?
It's partly true.
The film was produced with an unbelievable effort (two real palm trees) partly in Egypt,(a chalk quarry by Ruedesordorf).
It's partly my own fault.
Partly my fault. I didn't stop him.
Partly. No more?
His system is partly mumbo-jumbo and partly the real thing.
Partly, because we all deserve it, at least a little, and partly because in there your mind clears up.
I turned partly to the showcase.
Partly, we're guessing.
But God doth know, and you may partly see. how far I am from the desire of this.

News and current affairs

Some have argued instead that gold's long upward march has been partly driven by the development of new financial instruments that make it easier to trade and speculate in gold.
The voter-turnout problem partly reflects frustration about the present state of the EU, and also people's impression that they can exert little influence by voting one way or the other.
The good news is that there are many ways by which improved incentives could reduce emissions - partly by eliminating the myriad of subsidies for inefficient usages.
Increasing risk aversion is leading economic agents to adopt a wait-and-see stance that makes the slowdown partly self-fulfilling.
Tuberculosis was also soaring, partly as a result of the AIDS epidemic and partly because of the emergence of drug-resistant TB.
And, partly because an American child's lifetime prospects are more dependent on his or her parents' income and education than in other advanced countries, the US now has the least equality of opportunity of any advanced country.
In many of these countries, including the US, the European conquerors and their descendants nearly wiped out the indigenous populations, partly through disease, but also through war, starvation, death marches, and forced labor.
His predecessor, Boris Yeltsin, knew how to seize power but not how to consolidate it, which partly explains why power seeped away throughout his presidency.
Much of the programming aimed at youth, women, entrepreneurs, diasporas, technologists, and other social groups is partly funded and conducted by the private sector.
After the burst of growth that arrived with hyperinflation's end, growth slowed, partly because firms in the country couldn't get adequate finance.
Partly because of IMF mismanagement, this became a global financial crisis, raising interest rates for all emerging markets including Argentina.
But, beneath the surface, unease in the bilateral relationship persists, partly for historical reasons.
OXFORD - George W. Bush is approaching the end of his presidency mired in low popularity ratings, which partly reflects his policies in the Middle East.
The mainstream media's tendency to avoid checking out or reporting what is actually newsworthy in Internet conspiracy theories partly reflects class bias.
Too little government attention has been focused on such issues, partly because payoffs occur beyond electoral horizons, and partly because the effectiveness of government programs has been mixed.
This is partly because of the never-ending negotiation process with Mercosur, the troubled - and still incomplete - Latin American customs union.
But adequate investment in mitigating the damage could partly resolve the problem.
But, partly because several African countries have escaped the hang-over from the global credit crisis, more investors are focusing on business opportunities there.
For some analysts, the emergence of countries like Brazil as economic powerhouses stems partly from successful demutualization of their stock exchanges.
But it is condescending to refuse to hold many of them partly responsible for their own plight.
The DPJ government will collide head-on with the mandarins, partly because the party will find it hard to recruit sufficiently qualified policymakers.
Reform-minded politicians were partly to blame for this change.
But, despite these projects' reported billion-dollar price tags and high expectations, the investments have catalyzed little progress, owing partly to security issues.
The European Central Bank is staying calm for the moment, but it, too, is probably holding back on interest-rate hikes partly out of fear of driving the euro, already at record levels, even higher.
To illustrate his argument, Benedict noted that the international financial crash, partly a consequence of insatiable greed, had provoked debate about the need for an ethical basis for economic behavior.

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