[ adv ] in a magical manner <adv.all> it disappeared magically
Magically \Mag"ic*al*ly\, adv. In a magical manner; by magic, or as if by magic.
In recent years, Merck, Squibb, Marion Laboratories and others appeared magically immune from setbacks.
Prosecutors arranged a plea bargain with a man linked to a cult ring that allegedly smuggled marijuana and killed at least 15 people in rituals intended to magically protect its operations.
Chris Parry and Beverly Emmons's lighting perfectly complements the shifting scenes, changing magically from lemon yellow, to soft peach, to a cruel white light.
"I guess I thought somehow the situation would magically work itself out," she writes, after finding out how it feels to be caught between news deadlines and her 5-month-old daughter, Chase.
It is a criticism that you find yourself watching Knopfler on the screen, where close-ups catch his fingers magically milking the frets, rather than the long distance static view of the man live.
It adds to muscle size and strength, and - some predict - is the drug of the future. Alternately there is Clenbuterol, which magically burns off body fat and promotes rapid muscle development, exercise or no exercise.
The opening of 'Gigues' in the orchestral Images is magically done, with string textures exactly graded, woodwind figures etched sharp against them and each paragraph individually shaped.
Shuttle travel is so pricey that even an alchemist who could magically turn a cargo of lead into gold in space might lose money, says William Michael, a space expert at the National Academy of Sciences.
It is amazing how discipline problems magically disappear in the computer lab and it is rewarding to have students want to come in on their lunch hour to solve a problem.
It is very beautifully painted, there is a wonderful balance between image, color and surface, and it magically captures some of the sadness and mystery of time itself.