[
UK
/kˈeɪpəbli/
]
ADVERB
-
with competence; in a competent capable manner
they worked competently
How To Use capably In A Sentence
- As for the football boys, try and prove us all wrong - keep your gobs shut, your private parts in your trousers and drive your cars at sensible speeds - all them things that the rest of us seem to do perfectly capably.
- As a result, modernism seems to germinate - naturally and inescapably - in the damp, sweetly rotten soil of academic art.
- While Brown did not prescribe busing for racial balance, the logic of its argument led inescapably to that conclusion, even if no one thought of it in 1954.
- When they hand out grades, and give or with-hold promotion, teachers are inescapably confronted with this dilemma.
- Only through these courses could he understand the school mathematics deeply and after his graduation teach it capably.
- He seems to have become so enwrapped in the technical problems that he has lost sight of its inescapably political context.
- On the inescapably situated politics of subjectivitythe forms and meanings of Iin autobiographical texts more broadly, see Smith and Watson, De/Colonizing the Subject. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
- His formula starts with the best parts of country house hotel cooking - well-sourced raw ingredients and capably prepared, stripped of any pomposity or pretension.
- It is not just Warren Buffett's successor who will need to navigate the company forward capably. Berkshire will also need the right kind of board to oversee and promote its future.
- But she negotiates its vocal awkwardness capably, and supplies much of the character's blend of hauteur, froideur and directness.