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prosaically

[ UK /pɹəsˈe‍ɪɪkli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a matter-of-fact manner
    I applied my attention prosaically to my routine

How To Use prosaically In A Sentence

  • The distinctive flat-bottomed boats once used to transport the wine are still moored in the river, though today, more prosaically, the wine is brought down by road in stainless - steel tankers.
  • Prosaically, Villa was killed years later not by the U.S. Army but by a man he had cuckolded.
  • The distinctive flat-bottomed boats once used to transport the wine are still moored in the river, though today, more prosaically, the wine is brought down by road in stainless - steel tankers.
  • Rather than gushing down a lush mountainside, the headwaters of the river seen in The Source puddle prosaically beside a suburban high school.
  • The distinctive flat-bottomed boats once used to transport the wine are still moored in the river, though today, more prosaically, the wine is brought down by road in stainless - steel tankers.
  • More prosaically, Lyme disease is on the rise, with about 550 cases reported in 2008, the last year for which statistics were available, up from 215 in 2000. Strangest New York Visitors: Leprosy And The Bubonic Plague
  • Palamon's appeal to his kinsman for a last word, "if his heart, _his worthy, manly heart_" (an exact and typical example of Fletcher's tragically prosaic and prosaically tragic dash of incurable commonplace), A Study of Shakespeare
  • It is conceded that Coleridge is infinitely wise, but composes poems to exemplify "prosaically" a laughable theory. Wordsworth, the _Lyrical Ballads_, and Literary and Social Reform in Nineteenth Century America
  • More prosaically, he was perhaps the first advertiser to use a pretty girl to advertise a whole range of products, from soap to throat pastilles.
  • As the title prosaically suggests, you're headed back to Ostagar, the game-opening scene of King Cailan's grisly defeat, Loghain's betrayal and the fall of the Grey Wardens. Eurogamer
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