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Synonyms

wonderfully

American  
[wuhn-der-fuh-lee, -der-flee] / ˈwʌn dər fə li, -dər fli /

adverb

  1. in a way or to a degree that is excellent, great, truly satisfying, etc..

    There's nothing cheap about doing your own carpentry anymore, but this project turned out wonderfully.

  2. in a way or to a degree that arouses wonder or amazement; astonishingly.

    For a first novel by such a young author, it shows wonderfully vivid powers of description and characterization.


Other Word Forms

  • unwonderfully adverb

Etymology

Origin of wonderfully

First recorded in 1250–1300; wonderful ( def. ) + -ly ( def. )

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The professional rivalries are real, as J.D. finds when his hiring as Sacred Heart’s new chief of medicine gains him a nemesis in Joel Kim Booster’s wonderfully shady Dr. Eric Park.

From Salon

It was wonderfully tense, a game of psychology as much as a game of rugby.

From BBC

"He bounded up to me and introduced himself, and I think his words were 'how are you, mate?' I thought 'this guy is wonderfully different, he is an incredible character, full of confidence'."

From BBC

The first day goes wonderfully well—games of Bananagrams and Boggle, long walks with Rose’s obstreperous Newfoundland Walter.

From The Wall Street Journal

With each manicured frame and deceptively poignant observation on the impossibility of living normally in modern life, Kramer concocts an original, wonderfully empathetic study of the desire to play spectator to a world on fire.

From Salon