What is another word for prosaically?

Pronunciation: [pɹəsˈe͡ɪɪkli] (IPA)

Prosaically is an adverb that refers to something that's written or expressed in an ordinary, unpoetic, or straightforward way. Some synonyms for prosaically include typically, conventionally, literally, practically, matter-of-factly, and straightforwardly. Other synonyms include blandly, plainly, mundanely, and unremarkably. In contrast, some antonyms for prosaically include poetically, imaginatively, creatively, fancifully, and metaphorically. Knowing different words with similar meanings can provide alternatives for writers to use in their works, allowing for greater flexibility in expression, and preventing repetitive phrasing. Therefore, exploring synonyms is a valuable tool to augment the power of writing and verbal expression.

What are the hypernyms for Prosaically?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Prosaically

It has been prosaically compared to a winding street between enormously high houses, with a river falling out of the first-floor window of one of them.
"Climbing in The British Isles. Vol. 1 - England"
W. P. Haskett Smith
"I am going down to the shore, papa," she answered, as prosaically as if he had not sung his question.
"Her Mother's Secret"
Emma D. E. N. Southworth
Hong was prosaically making mutton broth for dinner; pyramids of sandwiches and little cakes stood on the sideboard.
"Sisters"
Kathleen Norris

Famous quotes with Prosaically

  • The prevailing situation of criticism ... has given rise to a cult of professional expertise whose effect in general is pernicious. For the intellectual class, expertise has usually been a service rendered, and sold, to the central authority of society. This is the of which Julien Benda spoke in the 1920s. Expertise in foreign affairs, for example, has usually meant the legitimization of the conduct of foreign policy and, what is more to the point, a sustained investment in revalidating the role of experts in foreign affairs. The same sort of thing is true of literary critics and professional humanists, except that their expertise is based upon noninterference in what Vico grandly calls the world of nations but which prosaically might just as well be called “the world.” We tell our students and our general constituency that we defend the classics, the virtues of a liberal education, and the precious pleasures of literature even as we also show ourselves to be silent (perhaps incompetent) about the historical and social world in which all these things take place. ...
    Edward Said
  • As for the general idea of what one would do if certain of death in an hour—I fancy most persons in normal health tend to sentimentalise and romanticise a bit about it. For my part—as a realist beyond the age of theatricalism and naive beliefs—I feel quite certain that my own known last hour would be spent quite prosaically in writing instructions for the disposition of certain books, manuscripts, heirlooms, and other possessions. Such a task would—in view of the mental stress—take at least an hour—and it would be the most useful thing I could do before dropping off into oblivion. If I finish ahead of time, I'd probably spend the residual minutes getting a last look at something closely associated with my earliest memories—a picture, a library table, an 1895 Farmer's Almanack, a small music-box I used to play with at 2 ½, or some kindred symbol—completing a psychological circle in a spirit half of humour and half of whimsical sentimentality. Then—nothingness, as before Aug. 20, 1890.
    H. P. Lovecraft

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