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The phrase "Intuitively" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is understood or perceived easily and naturally, without the need for conscious reasoning. Example: "Intuitively, I felt that the solution to the problem was simpler than it appeared."
Dictionary
Intuitively
adverb
Done with skill, but without special training or planning; instinctively.
Exact(46)
It lies in the fact that most of us from the postcolonial world, though intuitively sympathetic to the idea of self-determination, cannot claim to have fulfilled even partially its extravagant promise.
Intuitively this would appear to be reasonable, and many women anecdotally have found they were sicker with girls than with boys – but you can't depend on anecdotal evidence, I'm afraid.
He wants to do the same thing for the theory of gravitation, which he says is opaque and intuitively hard.
Intuitively, the offer of the print-alone option seemed absurd.
The link is intuitively plausible: higher temperatures speed up evaporation, reduce soil moisture and lead to drought.
Is it, as most people intuitively believe, a palpable resource like land, best allocated through property rights that can be bought and sold?
Similar(14)
The battle for places is particularly acute this autumn because of the shortage of entry-level jobs (see article).Counter-intuitively, perhaps, rampant grade inflation is adding to the competitive pressure.
Counter-intuitively, Honda then sold its Accord as a luxury sedan to businessmen, rather than betting on a cheap family car like its rivals.
This year, even under the budget cuts Mr Brown has proposed, those formulae would counter-intuitively cause school spending to rise.As this "direct democracy" and its consequence, "ballet-box budgeting", have grown, representative democracy (ie, the legislature) has become dysfunctional.
Somewhat counter-intuitively, platooning might also make roads safer.The environmental benefits come from reducing drag, says Tom Robinson of Ricardo, a British company which is co-ordinating the €6.4m ($9.1m) Safe Road Trains for the Environment (SARTRE) project, funded by the European Commission.
And, counter-intuitively, even Mr Gandhi's diffidence might turn out to be a boon.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com