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inexplicably

[ US /ˌɪnɪksˈpɫɪkəbɫi/ ]
[ UK /ˌɪnɛksplˈɪkəbli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a manner differing from the usual or expected
    he's behaving rather peculiarly
    had a curiously husky voice

How To Use inexplicably In A Sentence

  • Today's pop quiz is in honor of an actress for whom I once had precious little respect and whose casting over any number of other performers got me feeling dischuffed to the point of, if not beyond, churlishness until one day I found myself inexplicably fond of her and ashamed of my earlier thuggish disrespect. Who Goes There - Pop Quiz
  • Despite the rivalry, he insists he is still good muckers with Amis, who he thinks receives an inexplicably hostile press, and Barnes, who he says has been in hiding finishing a novel.
  • These guys are inexplicably stupid, tone deaf, suicidal and egomaniacally blind to the wishes of the American people. Home/News
  • By this point in their charmed lives, the thirtysomething mom and dad characters had stopped wearing saris and polyester pants and now dressed, inexplicably, for tennis: picture a darker, paunchier Bjorn Borg, in those snug shorts of the era, but with a bushy mustache and too many wristbands. Bollywood's NRI Reel Finally Gets Real
  • That should be enough to stem our sometimes inexplicably ludicrous and potentially harmful libidinous urges.
  • Yet, inexplicably, Treasury officials decided at that time of record-high interest rates to make 30-year bonds noncallable.
  • They eke out victories now, or inexplicably stumble like they did Tuesday night against 5 - 16 Sacramento.
  • Tucked down the side of one, inexplicably, was a black negligee.
  • Aeronautical pentathlon—which inexplicably has six events—is a riff on the modern pentathlon at the Olympics. The Aeronautical Pentathlon Has Six Events—and Flying Doesn't Count
  • Niagara's recurring invocation of the sound of water, the susurration and crashing of the falls, brings Rhys consciously, at first inexplicably, to mind.
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