Similar words: chronic, electronic, electronics, clinical, technical, mechanical, basically, typically. Meaning: [aɪ'rɑnɪklɪ /-'rɒn-] adv. 1. contrary to plan or expectation 2. in an ironic manner.
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181. The turtledove mocked ironically, "If so, how can you expect any care from your children?"
182. Yet he overcame it, and ironically he and many others came to believe that he owed his survival to the help of St Thomas Becket.
183. ironically among the major drivers of the movement for change were Arab perceptions that Iran, driven by Washington, had supported Israel during the Arab-Israeli war of 1973.
184. But the Net has brutalized old-line business across most industries-retail, tele-com, financial services and the technology industry itself, is, ironically, no exception.
185. MORPHEUS: Ironically, this is not far from the truth. Do you believe in fate, Neo?
186. Ironically, though, child labor legislation pitted women of different classes against one another.
187. Ironically, it was a child who helped to unlock another secret of a serene old age.
188. And Amazon did little to gain user's trust with an ironically Orwellian intrusion of owners' Kindle devices in order to delete copies of 1984 and Animal Farm.
189. Ironically, despite the inappropriateness of his symbol in medicine, Hermes did play a small role in the origin of the true symbol of the physician.
190. Ironically, one of the first recorded sufferers of post-traumatic stress disorder was a person who defined the very nature and development of modern nursing techniques.
191. Ironically, the success of the control programs is partly to blame for the resurgence of malaria.
192. Ironically, Wade starts off by cleaning the windshield and then uses a blow dryer to apply an even coat of dust to his canvas.
193. Ironically, the market, an undesigned mechanism, is the best example of a powerful incentive-compatible mechanism.
194. Ironically, one major casualty of that extreme position has been the environment itself.
195. Mr Wu, ironically, writes admiringly on his blog of Wen Jiabao 's common touch.
196. The reason, ironically, is that fire blight has become resistant to the antibiotic apple growers had been using,[sentencedict.com] streptomycin .
197. Ironically it was a stable "slosh" of Yuans that bought so much of US T-bills to help slowdown the US financial burnout and hold its financial credit ratings.
198. Ironically, much of the labor - facilitating industrialization came from the rural areas themselves.
199. Ironically, in some instances, purposely stimulating capsaicin receptors can alleviate pain.
200. I'll be bitterly merry, and ironically gay , and I'll laught in derision!
201. Ironically it was Mr. Liao's English skills that freed his creative passion, when an instructor asked him to translate the catalogs of the contemporary American artists George Segal and Jeff Koons.
202. Ironically, such behavior subverts a man's goal, because women generally lose interest in guys who get clingy and act more like a butler than a boyfriend.
203. Ironically, short-dated Treasuries could rally because there are simply so few alternative liquid investments that can compete with the U.S. bond market's size and depth.
204. Ironically, today's scofflaw spirit, whatever its undetermined origins, is being encouraged unwittingly by government at many levels.
205. Ironically, it's simultaneously harder because correctly handling Plug and Play and power management is fiendishly difficult.
206. Ironically, Beria was charged with being a paid asset of British intelligence shortly after the Rosenbergs were executed in 1953.
207. Project Paperclip, ironically, would use Nazi doctors to develop methods of interrogating German prisoners of war.
208. Ironically, it had been Millikan's experiment which convinced the experimentalist-inclined committee in Stockholm to admit Einstein to that select circle in 1922.
209. Ironically, relations between British and American Intelligence in late 1950's were at their lowest postwar ebb.
210. Ironically, some of the problems that plagued vacuum tubes and lead to their near-demise now haunt transistorized products.
More similar words: chronic, electronic, electronics, clinical, technical, mechanical, basically, typically, physically, historically, practically, politically, economically, dramatically, specifically, automatically, irony, laconic, environmental, environmental protection, communicate, incommunicado, communication, medical, musical, radical, logical, typical, ethical, chemical.