Aptly in a sentence as an adverb

I think Ben's blog entry would be much more aptly titled "an awesome place to leave"...

A more appropriate analogy would be "a head fake" as the late Randy Pausch so aptly put it.

It's also very hard work, crawlspaces are not named aptly, you can't really crawl there. And after a day in a crawlsuit you'll just love sitting behind your desk.

That said, this still reflects aptly what I think about censoring away profanity.

You have to navigate through what another commenter very aptly called their 'Maze of offers'. It's ridiculous.

The life of skinny dipping, cross-dressing, and acting like an idiot, all without the aid of alcohol, aptly describes my own. Sure, those times were fun, perhaps among the most fun of my life.

Some people are trying to, but it's an aptly ambiguous term to begin with. Also I have a letter of marque to plunder American television programming, so I prefer the term Copyright Privateer.

Next year the aptly-named "sync check" modification was installed to prevent shutting the circuit breaker unless the two buses had approximately equal phase.

With slums all along the street, with metal shacks aptly named 'hotels', with heaps of trash openly laid out and eaten by cows, with homeless kids/adults in bare feet walking along side of roads, with groups of women on their knees dusting the road with brooms. Then briefly comes tons of cars and people walking in between traffic.

An aptly timed popup from the antivirus vendor will appear shortly thereafter asking the user to pre-purchase 2 more years of complete computer protection! Oh, the business of fear mongering.

That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat, Of habits *****, is angel yet in this, That to the use of actions fair and good He likewise gives a frock or livery, That aptly is put on. Refrain to-night; And that shall lend a kind of easiness To the next abstinence: the next more easy; For use almost can change the stamp of nature, And master evn the ***** or throw him out With wondrous potency.

They wrote "Most authorities feel that current intelligence tests are more aptly described as 'scholastic aptitude' tests because they are so highly related to academic performance, although current use suggests that the term intelligence test is going to be with us for some time. This reservation is based not on the opinion that intelligence tests do not reflect intelligence but on the belief that there are other kinds of intelligence that are not reflected in current tests; the term intelligence is too inclusive."

This comment on the piece aptly sums up my response, it's by Sean Tucker: Adam, I don't know you -- I came here from the Buzzfeed article criticizing the ethics of the study that linked to this post, but it appears we do have a friend in common. I just have to ask - you honestly had a hypothesis that amounted to 'perhaps we can make people more depressed,' and decided to test it on a group that hadn't consented to the experiment, with no way to track its impact on their actual lives, only on the language they used in their Facebook posts?

Aptly definitions

adverb

with competence; in a competent capable manner; "they worked competently"

See also: competently ably capably