I was hoping for a scholarly explanation.
A treatise is a large, scholarly paper. An example of the word treatise used in a sentence might be, "The professor's treatise on the lifespan of mealworms was so boring that Maggie fell asleep on top of page three."
To find scholarly articles using Google, you can use Google Scholar, a specialized search engine that specifically indexes scholarly articles. Simply go to Google Scholar, enter your search terms, and browse through the results to find relevant scholarly articles on your topic.
No, "scholarly" is an adjective that describes someone or something as being characteristic of a scholar or academic. An example of using "scholarly" as an adverb would be "She writes scholarly articles."
Peer-reviewed scholarly journals
The word 'scholarly' is the adjective form for the noun scholar.The noun form for the adjective scholarly is scholarliness.
Scholarly - concerned with academic learning and research.
With scholar a user can find the scholarly information needed with out having to look up separate databases. Finding a scholarly work would be more simplistic.
Use scholarly but simple diction and avoid using contractions like can't, don't, and isn't.
No, a newspaper is not typically considered a scholarly source.
The word "scholarly" is an adjective. It is used to describe something as having the qualities of a scholar or being related to scholarly pursuits.
is a scholarly or systematic investigation or inquiry about a subject
i do not know how to use embalming in a sentence. (there is the sentence)