Dictionary
unforgettably
adverb
In an unforgettable manner; very memorably.
synonyms
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The word "unforgettably" is correct and usable in written English.
The adverb "unforgettably" is often used to describe an event, experience, or moment that is so remarkable or intense that it will be remembered for a very long time. For example, "The birth of her first child was an unforgettably joyous occasion."
Exact(60)
Carter's later prose writing has what Clapp describes as an "unforgettably sensuous" voice, coupled with the "sardonic wit" that was to earn her the title of the "White Witch of English Literature".
The following November, unforgettably, they came to London and thrashed England 6-3, becoming the first continental team to beat England on English soil.
I never realised before that Malvolio could be played as an old bore").The book begins unforgettably: "'My mother was a whore,' [Guinness] told the author John le Carré"; and ends no less memorably: "If a biographer called Gary O'Connor should approach you, tell him to fuck off".
Snow crunches like gravel; oil lamps cast greasy light on igloo walls; men in furs lumber like astronauts; women scrape fish and seal meat with bone knives: the world of Inuit legend and Robert Flaherty is recreated unforgettably.
A woman taking a ride on a boat becomes the river; the description of her hand dreamily trailing in the water unforgettably voluptuous.
Similarly, the background against which the two talk may be barely suggested, or it may form an integral part of the poem, as in Horace's "Journey to Brundisium" (I, v) or in Juvenal's description of the valley of Egeria, where Umbricius unforgettably pictures the turbulence and decadence of Rome (Satires, III).
He speaks, with marvelous directness, of love and death, reveals a deep compassion for all suffering humanity, and tells unforgettably of regret for the wasted past.
His life during this period is unforgettably described in his diaries, particularly Rōmaji nikki (first published in full in 1954; "Romaji Diary").
All of this was in the service of drama, as Verdi always stressed, and drama, as he saw it, emerged from the interaction of people in striking, usually dire situations people who were characterized unforgettably by Verdi's music.
Then he said, unforgettably, that he had been "watching badgers".
John Williams From The City, From The Plough by Alexander Baron An autobiographically-based, soldier's-eye view of the Normandy landings, this is an unforgettably powerful and profoundly compassionate account of the horror of the war, and the ordinary heroism of the men who fought it.
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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