minutely
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
minute1 /ˈmɪnɪt/
▶noun
- 1 a period of time equal to sixty seconds or a sixtieth of an hour.
■ informal a very short time.
- 2 (also arc minute or minute of arc) a sixtieth of a degree of angular measurement. (Symbol: ′)
– phrases
up to the minute incorporating the very latest information or developments.
up to the minute incorporating the very latest information or developments.
– origin ME: via OFr. from late L. minuta, fem. (used as n.) of minutus ‘made small’; the senses ‘period of sixty seconds’ and ‘sixtieth of a degree’ derive from med. L. pars minuta prima ‘first minute part’.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
minute2 /mʌɪˈnjuːt/
▶adjective (minutest)
- 1 extremely small.
- 2 precise and meticulous: a minute examination.
– derivatives
minutely adverb,
minuteness noun.
minutely adverb,
minuteness noun.
– origin ME (in the sense ‘lesser’, with ref. to a tithe or tax): from L. minutus ‘lessened’, past part. of minuere.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
minute3 /ˈmɪnɪt/
▶noun
- 1 (minutes) a summarized record of the points discussed at a meeting.
- 2 an official memorandum.
- 1 record or note (the points discussed at a meeting).
- 2 send (someone) a minute.
– origin ME: from Fr. minute, from the notion of a rough copy in ‘small writing’ (L. scriptura minuta).
'minutely' also found in these Oxford entries:

