unremarkably
/ˌʌn.rɪˈmɑː.kə.bli/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌʌn.rɪˈmɑːr.kə.bli/ (ame, ipa)
unremarkably — adverb
1. in a plain, average way that gives people little reason to notice it or talk abo
in a plain, average way that gives people little reason to notice it or talk about it.
The award ceremony ended unremarkably after a short speech and weak applause.
event + end unremarkably
Justin dressed unremarkably in a navy sweater and black work shoes.
dress unremarkably for plain appearance
After months of rumors, the meeting passed unremarkably with no difficult questions.
The little house stood unremarkably among the taller apartment blocks nearby.
Shirin spoke unremarkably during the panel, and reporters ignored her.
- ordinarily
more common and broader; it can also mean 'usually', not just 'without interest'
- uneventfully
narrower; emphasizes that nothing troublesome or dramatic happened
- unspectacularly
slightly more informal; often used for results or performances that lack excitement
- remarkably
shows that something stands out because it is surprising or impressive
- strikingly
focuses on a quality or contrast that is immediately noticeable
- memorably
emphasizes that something stays in people's minds afterwards
文法句型
end unremarkably
dress unremarkably
pass unremarkably
speak unremarkably
用法筆記
Often used when something seemed likely to be dramatic, impressive, or unusual but instead felt ordinary. It commonly describes public events, appearances, or performances that leave little impression.