Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adverb In a
clairaudient way; by means ofclairaudience .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Hearing clairaudiently can sound like a whispering voice in your head.
CREATE YOUR OWN FUTURE Jennifer Ann Daddio 2003
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I began to hear a distinct humming sound in my ears, the first stage in being able to hear clairaudiently.
CREATE YOUR OWN FUTURE Jennifer Ann Daddio 2003
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Hearing clairaudiently can sound like a whispering voice in your head.
CREATE YOUR OWN FUTURE Jennifer Ann Daddio 2003
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I began to hear a distinct humming sound in my ears, the first stage in being able to hear clairaudiently.
CREATE YOUR OWN FUTURE Jennifer Ann Daddio 2003
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With the spiritual eye we see "clairvoyantly"; with the spiritual ear we hear "clairaudiently," and so forth.
The Problems of Psychical Research Experiments and Theories in the Realm of the Supernormal Hereward Carrington 1919
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Sometimes clairaudiently, but generally through this cone when I sit in the dark. "
The Shadow World Hamlin Garland 1900
vanishedone commented on the word clairaudiently
A Google Books representative on metadata: 'We would never ingest our own mirth into metadata records. There's too much there already. Like the time one of our partner libraries supplied us with a catalog record for a turkey baster. Not a book about turkey basting. An actual turkey baster, presumably to be found in the stacks. One European library classified Darwin's Origin of Species as fiction. And there's a copyright record for a book that has no writer, only a psychic who received the text "clairaudiently."'
See also clairaudient.
September 9, 2009
reesetee commented on the word clairaudiently
Wow. That whole page is scary.
September 10, 2009
hernesheir commented on the word clairaudiently
A catalog record for a turkey baster. See, libraries have never been just a repository for just books, then or now. Turkey baster in a library. We all need to evolve, obviously.
Roland Brown was a very peculiar but revered paleobotanist at the Smithsonian in the first half of the 1900's. Last time I was there studying the collections, I made the customary pilgrimage to see the old pair of his jeans that live within one of the shelving units among catalogued plant fossils in the collection. Put a new twist on the term "specimen drawers" doesn't it?
September 10, 2009