[
US
/ˌsɝkəmˈstænʃəˌɫi/
]
[ UK /sˈɜːkəmstˌɑːnʃəlˌi/ ]
[ UK /sˈɜːkəmstˌɑːnʃəlˌi/ ]
ADVERB
-
insofar as the circumstances are concerned
the account was circumstantially accurate -
in minute detail
our inability to see everything minutely and clearly is due merely to the infirmity of our senses -
according to circumstances
he was convicted circumstantially -
without advance planning
they met accidentally
How To Use circumstantially In A Sentence
- In order to be able to convict him, they're going to be able to tie him, circumstantially or through direct evidence, to the deaths of these individuals.
- And some, like me, are what I call "circumstantially infertile. The Truth About Childless Women
- The circumstantially imposed corrections refer to the discursive move toward offering impartial, even detached, moral judgment.
- Change can seem painful in the short term, but, if you are willing to embrace it proactively, its lasting impact will nearly always be physically, spiritually, intellectually, and circumstantially transformative. God is Not a Christian, Nor a Jew, Muslim, Hindu …
- It had been confirmed circumstantially anyway.
- he was convicted circumstantially
- There's a difference between saying Addabbo sand-bagged gay marriage on purpose, or circumstantially because they were called upon first to cast their votes. What if His Name Were Zaddabbo?
- Again, whether or not any such overt decision was made by whites in this regard, the result was the same -- a gradual uprooting of blacks, circumstantially forcing them out of the District. Glenn Beck's Decision To Scratch Plan To Promote His Book May Have Been Wise
- You would never be able to link it up circumstantially.
- It is true that Guandique, who has since been indicted and will stand trial in October, is connected to the crime only circumstantially, but he seems to have repeatedly boasted in prison to fellow inmates about killing Chandra Levy. First the Murder, Then the Frenzy