In a practical way; not theoretically; really; as, to look at things practically; practically worthless., By means of practice or use; by experience or experiment; as, practically wise or skillful; practically acquainted with a subject., In practice or use; as, a medicine practically safe; theoretically wrong, but practically right., Almost.
Literally, "God be with you." Practically, it is used as an everyday greeting.
Khudhar practically means someone with self respect.
It is not a sentence, and by itself it has practically no meaning.
the original meaning is people from vassals. Practically slaves. helots είλωτες (ilotes) from the word είλως - vassal
These two terms are {practically} synonymous; they both have the same meaning.
The meaning of Arran is practically unknown, but it is thought to mean "high place".
Yes, idiomatically it can be an adverb, meaning nearly or practically(e.g. next to impossible).The pair can also be a compound preposition that means "adjacent."It can be an adverb, when used to mean "practically" or almost.(Getting a seat on the bus is next to impossible.)It is usually a preposition, meaning adjacent.(The table is next to the wall.)
Adjective forms of the noun flirt include flirty or flirtacious. The meaning of these two words is practically the same.
it is the one way in which we are learning the facts both in theoritically and practically by making assumptions with our convinience
Yes its an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective joyful and the noun joy. There is a related adjective "joyously" which is practically the same meaning.
Dairy-free is food that does not contain dairy. Not to be mean, but it practically says it in the name.
There was no way to practically estimate the number of attendees. There is practically no chance that Jupiter could become a star. At one point, the buffalo was practically extinct in many western states.