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the luckily
adverb
In a lucky manner; by good fortune; fortunately.
Exact(5)
She played Catherine Weaver, the (luckily) Edinburgh-born CEO of tech giant Zeira.
A neo-Nazi killed a Wilmette plastic surgeon not long after showing up at Mr. Schoenberg's office asking to see the luckily absent politician.
Blessed was the politician without a wife in Washington in 1829, and none more so than Martin Van Buren, the (luckily) widowed secretary of state.
Wife is panicky, trying to activate the (luckily right at hand) fire extinguisher, failing with it, hands it to me and I finally manage to blast the noxious dildo blaze with the entire contents of the extinguisher.
This puts concrete numbers to the general notion of a major role of these processes, at least in the evolution of prokaryotes [ 8- 12, 12, 37, 71, 73], and supports and extends the (luckily named) "genomes in flux" concept of Snel and co-workers [ 17].
Similar(55)
The affair, luckily, had the most English of endings.
The family, luckily, was out of town.
"But I like the chaos, luckily".
But the meeting, luckily for them, was cancelled.
The credits, luckily, included an uncommon name: Reggie Blennerhassett.
"And the challenge luckily produced positive results".
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