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16 Sentences With "most happily"

How to use most happily in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "most happily" and check conjugation/comparative form for "most happily". Mastering all the usages of "most happily" from sentence examples published by news publications.

They dwell most happily in memory, in longing, even in fantasy.
Wearing earphones draped around their necks and safety blinders on their glasses, most happily volunteer that they voted for Mr Trump and would do so again — tariffs or no tariffs.
ML: The one of the things that they have in common is that they deal most happily in the abstract, things that you don't hold in your hand, not a sensory experience.
It will be read most happily by fans of Hisham Matar's other work, who want further access to a mind that takes in details with a charged concentration that meanders to larger thought.
Actors ride in and out of the looping story, some of whom you're very happy to see, including Mr. Daniels, Scoot McNairy as the nearsighted sheriff of La Belle and, most happily, Sam Waterston as a weary U.S. marshal.
Most happily, the movie (written by Christina Hodson) proves disarmingly witty, working "The Breakfast Club" into its shtick, referencing the Cold War not long before the Berlin Wall comes tumbling down and indulging in teen hijinks -- like toilet-papering a house -- that Bumblebee embraces with a little too much gusto.
If you're not keeping up with Archie Comics—and you really should be, ya Moose—you're missing out on one of the most happily imaginative, quietly successful upgrades in recent memory, with Archie and his pals being recast as everything from on-the-run zombie-victims (2013's Afterlife with Archie) to deep-thinking, deep-feeling modern-drama kids (last year's modern Archie).
Many owners describe their Greyhounds as "45-mile-per-hour couch potatoes". Greyhounds live most happily as pets in quiet environments.Livinggood, Lee (2000). Retired Racing Greyhounds for Dummies, p. 31.
He proposed to her only weeks later, and they were married the same year. The couple were considered "one of the sporting world's most happily married couples." The couple spent their honeymoon in Antigua with one of Hunt's close friends, also newly married, and then settled in Spain for tax reasons. Later, Miller described feeling that Hunt's career came ahead of everything else in his life.
Wilson was born at Ravensworth in the North Riding of Yorkshire, one of at least five sons to Joseph Wilson (born c.1734) and his wife Jane Hutchinson. Some of his relations had farmed under the Earl of Effingham, which resulted in Wilson's distinctive Christian name.Full text of "In memory of Effingham Wilson" "His earliest years were most happily passed in the neighbourhood of the place of his birth" according to his biography.
John Betjeman (1972) London's Historic Railway Stations A descendant of Sir Charles once counted 72 bedrooms at Walton.Roger Wilkes, "House of fun: Walton Hall, Warwickshire", Daily Telegraph, 16 January 2002 They also had a residence in Belgrave Square, London. The Mordaunts remained part of the so-called "Marlborough House set" who were associated socially with the Prince and Princess of Wales. According to later legal reports, Sir Charles made a “handsome” settlement on his wife at the time of their marriage and initially they appeared to live “most happily together”.
Over the next twenty to thirty years the opera was performed in almost every major opera house in Europe, and even in Mexico City, Havana and Constantinople. The opera formed the basis for the composer's future great success. As remarked by the critic of the London magazine, The Harmonicon, in a review of the 1825 production in Trieste: > Of all living composers, Meyerbeer is the one who most happily combines the > easy, flowing and expressive melodies of Italy with the severer beauties, > the grander accomplishments, of the German school.
According to MessengerMessenger, Dally (2012), Murphy's Law and the Pursuit of Happiness: a History of the Civil Celebrant Movement, Spectrum Publications, Melbourne (Australia), , Chapters 43–48 the period from 1995 to 2003 is recorded as being the most happily productive of the Civil Celebrant Movement in Australia. Funeral and Naming ceremonies, originally opposed by the majority of celebrants and the Attorney-General's Department, had gradually and imperceptibly become accepted. A group of celebrants under the leadership of Rick Barclay, a successful Funeral and Marriage Celebrant, had morphed the original Funeral Celebrants Association of Australia into an organisation which accepted all ceremonies and celebrants into an inclusive association titled The Institute of Australian Celebrants. Kathleen Hurley, an active member of the Institute, persuaded Dally Messenger III to become more deeply involved.
Swift, however, when he was neither coarse nor frigid, sometimes achieved genuine success, as in the admirable verses on his own death. The odes of Ambrose Philips (1671–1749) addressed by name to various private persons, and, most happily, to children, were not understood in his own age, but possess some of the most fortunate characteristics of pure vers de société. In his Welcome from Greece, a study in ottava rima, Gay produced a masterpiece in this delicate class, but most of his easy writings belong to a different category. Nothing of peculiar importance detains us until we reach Cowper, whose poems for particular occasions, such as those on Mrs Throckmorton's Bullfinch and The Distressed Travellers, are models of the poetic use of actual circumstances treated with an agreeable levity, or an artful naïvety.
But > Quintilian is so consummate a master of rhetoric and oratory, that when, > after having delivered him from his long imprisonment in the dungeons of the > barbarians, you transmit him to this country, all the nations of Italy ought > to assemble to bid him welcome... Quintilian, an author whose works I will > not hesitate to affirm, are more an object of desire to the learned than any > others, excepting only Cicero's dissertation De Republica. The Italian poet Petrarch addressed one of his letters to the dead to Quintilian, and for many he “provided the inspiration for a new humanistic philosophy of education” . This enthusiasm for Quintilian spread with humanism itself, reaching northern Europe in the 15th and 16th centuries. Martin Luther, the German theologian and ecclesiastical reformer, "claimed that he preferred Quintilian to almost all authors, 'in that he educates and at the same time demonstrates eloquence, that is, he teaches in word and in deed most happily'" .
Standen described the circumstances of his knighthood in his "Relation" which he sent as a petition to King James in April 1604; > "after Her Majesty was most happily delivered of the then Lord the Prince > ... at which time in acknowledgement of Standen's services, it pleased the > King by the Queen's appointment to honour him with the order of knighthood, > as also it pleased Her Majesty, some days after the childbirth to cause the > knight to be called into her bedchamber, where the infant Prince laid > asleep, a cross of diamonds fixed on his breast, upon this cross Her Majesty > commanded the knight to lay his hand, to whom it her pleasure herself to > give the oath of fidelity."Mrs Hubert Barclay, The Queen's Cause: Scottish > Narrative, 1561-1587 (London, 1938), p. 151: Standen's "Relation" is in The > National Archives, TNA SP14/1/237. Standen wrote that Mary, Queen of Scots, declared he was the first Englishman to do homage to the prince, saying, "For that you saved his life".

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