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marvellously

[ UK /mˈɑːvələsli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. (used as an intensifier) extremely well
    the colors changed wondrously slowly
    her voice is superbly disciplined

How To Use marvellously In A Sentence

  • The à la carte steaks meet their match in excellent sautéed mushrooms, the onion-ring tower and a marvelously smoky, singed stack of grilled broccolini (it tastes interestingly bitter, like broccoli raab).
  • Five miles and 1000 vertical feet had a marvelously dissuasive effect on the competition. The Road to New Waters
  • The downscale springs are marvelously unsupervised, especially at night.
  • This recipe is marvellously simple and quick.
  • The stage was marvellously decorated to look like a shabby pub with its bar stools, spongy seats, Guinness mirrors and jukebox.
  • These marvellously embellished cups are the best thing that ever came from fox-hunting. THE TARTAN RINGERS
  • Capes, big brass buttons, skinny knits belted over print dresses, together with marvellously subtle colour combinations made for one of the most beautiful collections in Milan.
  • There were neither lifeboats nor mortar-apparatus in those days, but there were the same willing hearts and stout arms then as now, and in a marvellously short space of time, hundreds of the able-bodied men of the town, gentle and semple, were assembled on these wild cliffs, with torches, rope, &c.; in short, with all the appliances for saving life that the philanthropy of the times had invented or discovered. The Lighthouse
  • That was a rightwing fiesta, including a graf coming after the summary of the Democrats response to the Prez that was an almost perfect piece of punditland dreamery, with intimations of Broder marvelously woven into it: Matthew Yglesias » Al-Qaeda in Iraq
  • They are marvellously done, and they have caused a stir of approval in this country, while also raising doubts.
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