parenthetical
adjective
par·en·thet·i·cal
ˌper-ən-ˈthe-ti-kəl
ˌpa-rən-
variants
or less commonly parenthetic
ˌper-ən-ˈthe-tik
ˌpa-rən-
1
a
: of, relating to, or expressed in a parenthesis
a parenthetical remark/comment/note
One sentence runs on for nearly two pages; other sentences meander through the potholes of so many parenthetical expressions as to make it nearly impossible to follow the trail of the argument …—James Q. Wilson
In a construction of this sort, the phrase "the coach said" should be regarded as a parenthetical insert and should be implicitly thought of as flanked by commas.—Samuel R. Levin
… his travel diaries were notable for their erratic punctuation, parenthetic embellishments and an extraordinary way with adjectives.—William Dalrymple
b
: enclosed in parentheses
a foreign word followed by a parenthetical translation
The recuperating Yankees have a parenthetical medical problem that is now part of each player's name: Hernández (elbow), Pettitte (elbow), Rivera (ankle), Mendoza (shoulder), O'Neill (foot), Justice (groin), Jeter (hamstring), Knoblauch (elbow). Put them together and it spells Yankees (problems).—Dave Anderson
2
: containing parentheses : using or given to using parentheses
a parenthetical style
parenthetically
ˌper-ən-ˈthe-ti-k(ə-)lē
adverb
ˌpa-rən-
"They are a good nucleus of ideas for me," she says, adding, almost parenthetically, "Of course you have to know a lot about medicine to understand them."
—Publishers Weekly
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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