
That is where the Edwardian-Georgian age differed most hopefully from the Victorian.I think she took heart when I ate so plentifully, and we all spoke hopefully again.Before they realized it, they were on the track with faces turned hopefully toward Wellington.Ottila, with hidden face, watched while she wept, and waited hopefully for the relenting sign.Everything was going well, no cause for anxiety, and the manager spoke hopefully of the future.Penny glanced hopefully toward the highway, but the press car was not to be seen.He was thinking hard and far from hopefully as a moment later he hastened down the street.Poor yellow sheet, that looked so hopefully in the Livingstones' window!.

Lagg looked hopefully from one to the other of the Outdoor Girls. She wondered hopefully whether Desmond was one of those names.One morning the child spoke to Bellerophon even more hopefully than usual.Maryland had not risen in tumultuous welcome as Lee hopefully expected.The commissioner whistled lowly, and his eyes grew hopefully bright.They followed him from machine to machine, first hopefully and then fearfully.Lucyet tried to smile hopefully in return, but the attempt was a failure.His family were contented that he was thus respectably and hopefully employed.Men did not speak hopefully of my chance of getting through.And Ralph went hopefully forth with his brother.A resolute, thrifty peasantry looks hopefully forward.They hurried on, looking hopefully for a place.Bill frowned hopefully to himself, but no inspiration came.How hopefully it sounded, how bold and firm it was.Hence we may look hopefully to the future.The effort can be hopefully undertaken.

#Hopefully in a sentence manual
I like to quote Diana Hacker, author of many editions of the favorite college English Composition grammar and mechanics style manual called A Pocket Style Manual, which is a reliable resource for those who use MLA, APA, and Chicago styles. After three decades of debate, most of us are now confused. Prior to this, so they say, the word was used without complaint.

According to an NPR article, thirty years ago a few famous grammarians decided to “vilify” the word. There remains debate about whether this adverb is appropriate or not. Susan Metzger communication, editing, hopefully, language, rocky mountain english professor, STYLE, word choice
