halieutically

English

Etymology

halieutic + -ally

Adverb

halieutically (not comparable)

  1. (rare, humorous) In terms of fishing.
    • 1877, John Jackson Manley, Notes on Fish and Fishing, page 267:
      But, however much to be despised gastronomically, the barbel halieutically, or in an angling point of view, amply makes up for his carnal insipidity and positive nastiness. He is essentially a game fish when hooked, and fights bravely to the last.
    • 1883, Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art
      [] perhaps the author himself, despite the hundred and fifty pages which he has filled, has been somewhat cramped by his attempt to be halieutically encyclopaedic.
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