intendedly


Also found in: Thesaurus, Idioms.

in·tend·ed

 (ĭn-tĕn′dĭd)
adj.
1. Deliberate; intentional: "He nodded again, so slight a motion that only one who knew him could read it as an intended gesture" (Sabina Murray).
2. Prospective; future: an intended trip abroad next month.
n. Informal
A person whom one intends to marry; a fiancé or fiancée: our daughter and her intended.

in·tend′ed·ly adv.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

intendedly

(ɪnˈtɛndɪdlɪ)
adv
with an intention or aim
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
The Acorn House was intendedly unconventional, because "conventional methods and materials could never offer the same results, strengths, or economics." It faced significant opposition from local building regulators who were "elected to stop the building of cracker boxes" (Koch and Lewis 1958, 100).
Indeed one can argue that it required the largely Franciscan-nurtured nominalist theology to render respectable Marsiglio's secular jurisprudence, and that the increasing independence of medicine from theology, as of the body from the soul, was already in part a derivative of Avicenna's intendedly Islamic metaphysics with again a curiously secularising upshot.
Since the subjects at this research stage were intendedly "naive," we provided concept definitions and then asked them to match the sentences to one of the corresponding definitions.
On June 19 last year, Osborne drove his van intendedly into the worshippers leaving Finsbury Park Mosque after evening prayers in north London.
Implicitly, at this early moment, Ostrom seems to presume intendedly rational actors (consumers and producers) (Simon, 1962: 16, quoted by Williamson, 1985: 45), and it is only later that the Ostroms make behavioral responses to institutions an object of their research (Ostrom and Ostrom, 1999a: 107).
According to Herbert Simon (1961), the individuals are "intendedly rational, but only limitedly so".
The BTF explains this as the struggle involved in intendedly altering firm (and subsequently added, interfirm) routines (Argote & Greve, 2007).
The resulting plays become more contemporary and intendedly audience-friendly, although, as pointed out by some scholars (Thacker 2008: 18), they may mislead the spectators to accept a parody as something genuinely Lopean or Calderonian.
Bounded rationality assumes that actors are intendedly rational (i.e., are goal oriented and adaptive), but are limited by the information they possess and by their cognitive and emotional architecture.
Simon's notion of "bounded rationality," being "behavior that is intendedly rational, but only limitedly so ...," (59) and other approaches addressing limitations within human behaviour (60) were increasing in influence.
First, bounded rationality refers to economic actors' behavior that is "intendedly rational, but only limitedly so" (Simon, 1961, p.
Simon (1961) argues economic actors are "intendedly rational, but only limitedly so".