In a fortunate manner; luckily; successfully; happily.
In a gracious manner; courteously; benignantly., Fortunately; luckily.
My grandmother had a tumor removed for a biopsy. Fortunately, it was not malignant! (Meaning it was not cancerous)
Fortunately is an adverb, yes.Some example sentences are:Fortunately, I have a backup copy.We fortunately arrive don time.
The suffix for the word "fortunately" is -ly.
In Shakespeare's day the word "happy" meant "fortunate" or "lucky". We still have this meaning in the phrase "a happy accident" which means a lucky or fortunate one. "Happily" is the adverbial form, meaning "fortunately". .
"Fortunately, I was able to get to the wedding on time despite the traffic." "He rolled all the way down the hill, but fortunately was not badly hurt."
When i was in the store it started raining, fortunately i had brought my umbrella
Fortunately, I found my homework just in the nick of time.
The root word of "fortunate" is "fortune." "Fortune" comes from the Latin word "fortuna," meaning luck or fate. In English, the suffix "-ate" is added to "fortune" to create the adjective "fortunate," meaning having good luck or being favored by fortune.
Fortunately
fortunately.
Yes it is.