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"quite incidentally" is a grammatically correct phrase and can be used in written English
It is used as an adverbial phrase to indicate something that is mentioned or done casually or by chance. Example: "Quite incidentally, I stumbled upon this quaint little café while exploring the backstreets of the city." In this sentence, "quite incidentally" is used to show that the speaker came across the café by chance while they were exploring, rather than intentionally seeking it out.
Exact(7)
Williams' homer had, quite incidentally, made the score 4 3.
Does etiquette require that we conform to the information we acquired late, and quite incidentally?
In this time he quite incidentally formed much of my musical tastes, and they have lasted a lifetime.
Both rooms are used to study sound effects, and, quite incidentally, to send visitors home happy with the idea that they understand science.
A teenage girl had tried a range of solvents to remove glued-on eyelashes, and sought advise on how to remove the remaining eyelash, quite incidentally describing her sore and swollen eyes.
This faith is, quite incidentally, more likely to ensure the survival of the church.JOHN PAUL HOSKINSCambridgeDances with bearsSIR Your suggestion that the spread of tribal casinos (October 24th) in California will amount to the "Indians' revenge" is way off the mark.
Similar(53)
In 2003, Savage said that he voted in 2000 for George W. Bush "quite reluctantly, incidentally".
We calculate that we can create monuments on the same scale as Arizona (it's quite beautiful, incidentally) at every State Capitol in America for roughly the same amount of money that is would cost to build the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington today--in the neighborhood of $24 million.
(To depict a boring person as such, without being boring, was, incidentally, quite difficult).
There is, incidentally, quite a breast implant theme emerging in this series: Caroline's grotesque spouse was going to buy her a boob job for her birthday in the last episode.
They were also, incidentally, quite merciless toward the shibboleths that Deresiewicz implicitly accuses them of propagating: don't split infinitives, don't end a sentence with a preposition, and so on.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com