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spontaneously
[ spon-tey-nee-uhs-lee ]
adverb
- naturally, without premeditation, prompting, or planning:
The author recounts how a fully-fledged exchange market economy emerged spontaneously in his POW camp.
These answers were given spontaneously to an open-ended question that did not offer response options.
- in an impulsive way:
It was so cold the other night that I spontaneously booked a trip to Turks and Caicos.
- by a natural process or from an internal force or cause:
A calf should normally stand spontaneously within 60â90 minutes of its birth.
The symptoms resolved spontaneously within 6 months of onset.
Other yÐÄvlog Forms
- ²ÔŽÇ²Ô·²õ±èŽÇ²Ô·³Ù²¹Â·²Ô±ð·ŽÇ³Ü²õ·±ô²â adverb
- ²õ±ð³ŸÂ·Ÿ±Â·²õ±èŽÇ²Ô·³Ù²¹Â·²Ô±ð·ŽÇ³Ü²õ·±ô²â adverb
- ²õ³Ü²ú·²õ±èŽÇ²Ô·³Ù²¹Â·²Ô±ð·ŽÇ³Ü²õ·±ô²â adverb
- ³Ü²Ô·²õ±èŽÇ²Ô·³Ù²¹Â·²Ô±ð·ŽÇ³Ü²õ·±ô²â adverb
yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of spontaneously1
Example Sentences
"We were sitting in my living room, reading the Bible," she said, and spontaneously decided to "hit record and started talking."
He would make decisions spontaneously, in private, preferring to take advice from the friends he went drinking with, Kim said.
Mr Harris said he acted spontaneously to capture the bird on Thursday morning.
âIâm just going to be there with him, and then spontaneously heâs like, âI want to play âOphelia,â Dad â you come play with me.â
He shared an embrace with Sir Keir Starmer outside No 10, where he was greeted with spontaneously cheering crowds, and met with King Charles for tea.
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