anagraphically

Involving or pertaining to anagraphic data.

Adverb

  1. Involving or pertaining to anagraphic data.
    • The socialists all seemed to me to be old, even those who were anagraphically young, and to be lacking in revolutionary capacity. - 1969, Joyce Lussu, Freedom has no frontier, page 11:
    • Even in a restricted group of persons, individualities have the right to manifest themselves; even where anagraphically just one religion is present, there are differences in approaching the same faith and in expressing...
    • A bare two per cent of the country—six million acres squeezed between the vast rainless deserts—was capable of sustaining life, and the population was increasing by half a million human beings every year. Anagraphically...
  2. Involving the relationship between an ontological entity and its representation in words or symbols.
    • Since there are, in the LGN, a number of examples of the SAR sign with a value mú, it may be that the place name in the Sippar tablet should be read anagraphically as mú:šim and connected with the 'à-me-šum of the LGN....
    • The Natasha of War and Peace, who anagraphically does not exist, in the economy of the book and in readers' imaginations is more real than Napoleon. - 1996, Giuseppe Mantovani, Environments: From Everyday To Virtual,...
    • Evident in the representation of three of early cinema's most popular stars, this tendency to construct the persona anagraphically - to refer to the self as a token of a transindividual category -- is a common feature...

Origin

From anagraphic + -ally.