normally

adv
/ˈnɔː.mə.li/UK/ˈnɔɹ.mə.li/CA/ˈnɔ.mə.li/

Etymology

From normal + -ly.

  1. derived from normālis
  2. suffixed as normally — “normal + -ly

Definitions

  1. Under normal conditions or circumstances

    Under normal conditions or circumstances; usually; most of the time

    • Normally, I eat breakfast at 6am, but today, I got up late and didn't eat until 9.
    • It comes from the Latin insurgo, meaning “to rise up within”: so insurrectionists are, etymologically, the same as “insurgents”, even if that is normally a word for those who do not meekly accept western military rule.
    • A normally bustling border crossing between Tanzania and Malawi was noticeably quieter than usual on Thursday as a result of an escalating regional trade row.
  2. In the expected or customary manner.

    • Lisa ate normally, until she realised that she was late for choir, when she sped up.
  3. To a usual or customary extent or degree.

    • He was abnormally agitated, she only normally so.
    • An even more important reason is that our generation is not only normally ignorant but abnormally so. That is, we not only have scholars who do not know the history of the church's testimony, but we have those who tell it like it was not.
  4. + 1 more definition
    1. In the manner of a variable with a Gaussian distribution.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for normally. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA