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miraculously

[ UK /mɪɹˈækjʊləsli/ ]
[ US /mɝˈækjəɫəsɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a miraculous manner
    my hand grasped the gun that was, miraculously, lying on the ground beside my finger tips

How To Use miraculously In A Sentence

  • She tapped her umbrella on the setts, calling haughtily for way, and way miraculously appeared. At Swim, Two Boys
  • Miraculously, this is one of the paciest, easiest to read novels you could imagine. Times, Sunday Times
  • She miraculously encountered the prison dungeon and entered to get some answers.
  • I suggest that we sit down for a moment on a nearby bench, which is miraculously free of dossers and bank clerks.
  • Miraculously, Posada managed to find the ball, whirl and throw a perfect peg down to second to impale the Impaler.
  • Another victim of the changing fortunes of war was Nedeltcho Bontchev, best remembered as the flier who miraculously survived a collision between his aircraft and an Allied bomber.
  • The wound in the shoulder is miraculously healing, without either blood-letting or cauteries. To Have and to Hold
  • His tomb was discovered miraculously in the 5th century. Times, Sunday Times
  • Most irritating were the German rocket launchers, which miraculously decimate infantry and armour alike with impunity.
  • So I feel very disquieted by any suggestion that this is a memoir showing people how possible it is to make the most of a bad start, how to love parents who have behaved atrociously, how to somehow miraculously rise above trauma out of sheer good will. The Glass Castle « Tales from the Reading Room
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