miraculously - meaning and definition. What is miraculously
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What (who) is miraculously - definition

HIGHLY UNUSUAL EVENT BELIEVED TO BE OF SUPERNATURAL OR DIVINE ORIGIN
Miracles; Miraculous; Miricles; Miricle; Holy miracle; Miracles in Christianity; Religious phenomena; Miraculously; Thaumatology; Miracle in Islam
  • The ''[[Miracle of the Slave]]'', a 1548 painting by Tintoretto, from the Gallerie dell'Accademia in Venice. It portrays an episode of the life of [[Saint Mark]], patron saint of Venice, taken from [[Jacobus de Voragine]]'s ''[[Golden Legend]]''. The scene shows a saint intervening to make a slave who is about to be martyred invulnerable.

miraculously         
miraculous         
¦ adjective having the character of a miracle.
Derivatives
miraculously adverb
miraculousness noun
miraculous         
adj. miraculous that + clause (it's miraculous that they were rescued)

Wikipedia

Miracle

A miracle is an event that is inexplicable by natural or scientific laws and accordingly gets attributed to some supernatural or praeternatural cause. Various religions often attribute a phenomenon characterized as miraculous to the actions of a supernatural being, (especially) a deity, a magician, a miracle worker, a saint, or a religious leader.

Informally, English-speakers often use the word miracle to characterise any beneficial event that is statistically unlikely but not contrary to the laws of nature, such as surviving a natural disaster, or simply a "wonderful" occurrence, regardless of likelihood (e.g. "the miracle of childbirth"). Some coincidences may be seen as miracles.

A true miracle would, by definition, be a non-natural phenomenon, leading many writers to dismiss miracles as physically impossible (that is, requiring violation of established laws of physics within their domain of validity) or impossible to confirm by their nature (because all possible physical mechanisms can never be ruled out). The former position is expressed (for instance) by Thomas Jefferson, and the latter by David Hume. Theologians typically say that, with divine providence, God regularly works through nature yet, as a creator, may work without, above, or against it as well.

Examples of use of miraculously
1. Yet over and over again, each of the Frydmans miraculously defied death, and in 1'45 were just as miraculously reunited.
2. More polls» Miraculously, the elderly driver survived.
3. Dennis Quaids career miraculously survives unscathed.
4. Miraculously nothing broke or fell off of the shelves.
5. Nor have those tensions miraculously vanished with the film‘s completion.