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Space for peacekeeping operations - one might polemically say, yes, but against whom?
I say this polemically, or in reply to the inquiry, why not realize your world?
Camp is not polemically introduced, to make a point; it just is.
This was a view held polemically by overt modernists.
He remained open to all approaches to the medium, refusing to be locked in polemically to any one method or style.
It was only after traveling to Central America several years ago that he decided to throw caution to the wind and write polemically.
Critical evaluation of these three novels ranges from the polemically hostile to the genuinely sympathetic.
The work is a polemically anti-Bahá'í book.
His ultimate self-definition was overtly, unabashedly, and often polemically whiggish.
The trend in painting he pursued during this period was towards symbolism, which he had publicly and polemically criticised.
In the context of the 1948 War, several historians pointed out the nuance, sometimes polemically, that can exist between a "battle" and a "massacre".
Leventis himself is unreservedly and nearly polemically critical of mainstream Greek political parties and their leaders.
Why can't we work artistically rather than polemically with today's new merging of high and low culture to form a commerce-driven mass culture?
Polemically, Pătrăşcanu theorized that all these steps were "democratic-bourgeois", and not socialist in their essence.
Enhedslisten polemically called this "arranged marriages".
Here is an ambitious work from the literary academy, polemically directed against the conception of literary value purportedly prevailing there.
Modernism's rupture with the past, while polemically exaggerated well past the point of truth, was nonetheless a major part of its appeal.
Phillips uses fragmented narrative polemically.
He councilled polemically in the Third Siege of Missolonghi from March 1825.
A person who often writes polemics, or who speaks polemically, is a polemicist or a polemic.
The term 'Blanquism' has often been used polemically to accuse some revolutionaries of failing to sufficiently meld their praxis with the mass working class.
In a few years, the accusation of Arminianism was much used polemically against the group of theologians now known as Caroline divines.
Ellington is frequently called jazz's greatest composer (sometimes, more polemically, he's called America's greatest composer, period).
"The term 'anarcho-syndicalist' only came into wide use in 1921-1922 when it was applied polemically as a pejorative term by communists to any syndicalists.
We fear it would be manipulated and interpreted as a collective reaction orchestrated by what are polemically called 'former colonial powers' against Zimbabwe and its government.