Dictionary
the evidently
adverb
In such a way as to be clearly visible or manifest; distinctly, clearly.
Exact(59)
(And, of course, for the evidently gutless Food and Drug Administration. But that's another story).
The evidently close connection between language and thought does not imply that there can be no thought without language.
At the other end of the scale, in the evidently more prudent Balearic Islands, the average stake was €39.79.
But in this case the evidently lowest of budgets hasn't been used to serve the play adequately.
Viennese critics forgave the evidently mangled performance of Beethoven's Ninth out of deference toward the great man.
The evidently exasperated elections commissioner, Dayananda Dissanayake, described numerous transgressions by the government during the campaign, concluding that "state institutions operated in a manner not befitting state organizations".
Raman tests showed that the evidently healthy bones from the Mary Rose are, from a chemical standpoint, just like those of a healthy person today.
Yet there is something quite significant about the evidently negative rhetorical charge of "welfare" and "food stamps" among smaller-government, freer-markets types.
Its sponsor is J. Kalani English of Maui, the evidently star-struck state senator who let Mr. Tyler's lawyer help write it.
The depiction of its heroine's dysfunction is similarly convincing, and is also disconcertingly at odds with the evidently high-functioning capacities of its creator.
(The evidently ineducable Tom gets lost along the way.) But they're all so ridiculous that it's hard to locate any imparted lessons.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com