[
US
/ˈmædʒɪkəɫi, ˈmædʒɪkɫi/
]
[ UK /mˈædʒɪkli/ ]
[ UK /mˈædʒɪkli/ ]
ADVERB
-
in a magical manner
it disappeared magically
How To Use magically In A Sentence
- Indeed, literature is full of fabulations wherein the world of a rat or dog is opened up magically to our vision.
- They believed the only reason development was not working was the lack of professional input: if we provided this, poverty would magically vanish.
- Actually it's called a monstrance and it contains a consecrated communion wafer (the big size that only priests get to eat), which by now has magically become the body and blood of Jesus Christ in the form of bread. (there was a time when people chopped each other's heads off over a disagreement about whether it contained any blood) "the abuse took place in the 1970s; the police were informed and acted" - Jack Valero RichardDawkins.net : The Latest Updates
- The fresh tale follows the familiar style of the original - the eponymous hero magically transported from a suburban fancy-dress shop to a new world.
- Where?" cried I, looking all round me in the surprise of the moment, as if I had expected to see the title magically inscribed for us on the walls of the room. After Dark
- Flash I was saddled with 'Hologram' for a while, in respect of my annoying habit of disappearing instantly on a run ashore and reappearing magically in camp tucked up in bed minus speech, faculties and an workable digestive system teuchter. it means country folk. Army Rumour Service
- In the 1980s, the Conservative Party also received loans that magically resulted in the loaner getting a peerage, and it still does the same thing today.
- The most rewarding aspect of the exhibition involved moving into and through the magically transformed space of the gallery.
- Making 'demerit' goods (that produce negative externalities) expensive does not magically stop people from consuming them. Times, Sunday Times
- he asked with soft wonder, all his anger, pain and frustration magically drained away.