Successfully in a sentence as an adverb

A reliable rocket is one that successfully does what it is supposed to. A safe rocket is one that doesn't **** people.

So many people in fact, that they successfully pressured Apple to add scrolling as an alternative to pagination in iBooks. I'm one of the people who uses that.

What I wouldn't do was continue running on an instance that had been exploited and assume I'd successfully cleaned it up.

Many people are successful because they successfully sell non-reality to people when it suits their purpose. Engineers tend to have problems with such people.

There are at least 3 NGOs who have successfully managed to reduce **** and help the children of prostitutes rehabilitate in better professions. Over last 10 years, the sex workers in this area have reduced.

They've successfully kept most of it a secret, even though the direct victim had their suffering eased. The indirect and ultimate victims of this, our individual rights and society's ideals, are still suffering.

Are you saying you have no system in place to monitor if transactions execute successfully? I'm not trying to be hyperbolic but that's really shocking for a company that is trying to play a role as a financial institution.

If there is nothing that can be done to successfully insulate a tool from unexpected behavior like this, then that tool scores less in evaluations that consider the risk of using it. npm, at this point, has more going against it in the discussion than going for it right now.

That was never a clear enough, coherent enough, or informed enough vision of the complete GNU project and, consequently, GNU has never really successfully gelled. You can grab some "100% libre" distributions, these days, but only barely.

Any teams that have successfully internalized the notion that they should be externally programmable platforms from the ground up are underdogs -- Maps and Docs come to mind, and I know GMail is making overtures in that direction. But it's hard for them to get funding for it because it's not part of our culture.

I wouldn't leave my room for weeks on end; on a few occasions I was so successfully reclusive that people worried that I disappeared or died called the police to investigate. A few times I almost did die; I think the biggest reason I never committed ******* was that I didn't have the willpower for even that.

If I can successfully keep malware off the PCs of middle aged parents with teenaged children, then the government capable of developing and operating fleets of unmanned military drones can certainly isolate a network and disable the USB bus. There is definitely some high level **** going on right here.

This bodes well for the prospect of navigating out of this whole mess successfully since on the whole we seem to have good instincts about what is trustworthy and what is untrustworthy. I think that it actually has tended to clarify thinking about security so that fewer and fewer engineers are able to delude themselves into trusting something that they know deep down is really untrustworthy.

NPR and NYT are usually sources of very solid journalism, the fact that they would drop the real story for some gossip about Snowden implies that someone is able to successfully exert pressure on these organizations. The surveillance alone leaves the possibility that one agency has started to go to far, but this more systematic reaction indicates that the trouble is deeper and more wide-spread.

Successfully definitions

adverb

with success; in a successful manner; "she performed the surgery successfully"