[
US
/ˌvɑɫənˈtɛɹəɫi/
]
[ UK /vˌɒləntˈɛɹəli/ ]
[ UK /vˌɒləntˈɛɹəli/ ]
ADVERB
-
out of your own free will
he voluntarily submitted to the fingerprinting
How To Use voluntarily In A Sentence
- 'It must be -- eight o'clock,' said the gasping voice -- '_eight o'clock_;' and the tone became a whisper, as though the idea thus half involuntarily revealed had been drawn jealously back into the strongholds of consciousness. Robert Elsmere
- For now, I've voluntarily dismounted from the property ladder and am renting a nice family home while I see how the economy and the housing market develop.
- _ -- Most children, if not all, even when they have very early formed R correctly (involuntarily), introduce other sounds in place of it in speaking -- e. g., they say _moigjen_ for "morgen," _matta_ for "Martha," _annold_ for "Arnold," _jeiben_ for "reiben," _amum_ for The Mind of the Child, Part II The Development of the Intellect, International Education Series Edited By William T. Harris, Volume IX.
- Involuntarily, she stepped in, biting the inside of her cheek apprehensively and casting her eyes over the rows of neatly aligned desks in the room.
- By medicalising their behavior we give medicine and the state the remit to involuntarily detain and medicate such people to prevent them from behaving in ways society finds intolerable.
- Reasoned subpoint lameness trihydroxybenzene viagra online Reflesh auk involuntarily caddie botulinic turner libelee omphalic autointoxication diskectomy allorhythmia obsoleteness disembosoming; cradling. Top Headlines from World Press Review
- His claws extend involuntarily and the hair on his neck rises.
- The pain in the region of her heart was so intense that she wrapped her arms around herself involuntarily.
- Some Tories even forecast that Mr Major would quit voluntarily rather than face the humiliation of a Tory leadership challenge.
- Shopkeepers will also agree not to sell illegal fireworks which have been voluntarily banned by the industry.