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effectively
[ ih-fek-tiv-lee, ee-fek鈥 ]
adverb
- in a way that accomplishes a purpose or produces the intended or expected results:
These scissors are no longer sharp and do not cut effectively.
You may not like all your coworkers, but you still have to learn to work effectively with them.
- in actuality; in practice:
Allowing the legislature to take existing money for schools and use it for other purposes effectively means there will be no new money for education.
- in a way that produces a vivid impression; strikingly:
The visually rich photographs are effectively displayed against the stark white gallery walls.
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 辫谤别路别蹿路蹿别肠路迟颈惫别路濒测 adverb
- 辩耻补路蝉颈-别蹿路蹿别肠路迟颈惫别路濒测 adverb
- 蝉耻产路别蹿路蹿别肠路迟颈惫别路濒测 adverb
- 蝉耻路辫别谤路别蹿路蹿别肠路迟颈惫别路濒测 adverb
- 耻苍路别蹿路蹿别肠路迟颈惫别路濒测 adverb
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of effectively1
Example Sentences
Having acquired some training with nitroglycerin in the Army, he wrongly convinces himself that he has the know-how to effectively blow up a safe.
The victory of the communist regime over the U.S. allied armies in the south effectively ended a costly, three decades-long conflict and unified the country.
"There's always a trade-off... You have limited resources, you have to think about how to use them effectively and efficiently."
You can effectively pretend that all the things you are doing are no longer political choices, they're just the inevitable physical consequences of the market system, which covers absolutely all possible things.
Meant as a temporary measure, the so-called Nixon shock of 1971 caused the dollar to drop, effectively ending the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates established after the end of World War II.
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