"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.
Commas are a feature of sentence structure. There is no word or phrase in English that requires one. Whether a word has a comma after it depends on the word's function in the sentence.For example: Fortunately for you, the train is on time.Fortunately, the train is on time.The train was fortunately on time, so I caught it.
Fortunately, the damage is reversible.
You were fortunate that you asked the question on WikiAnswers as you have now got an answer.
My grandmother had a tumor removed for a biopsy. Fortunately, it was not malignant! (Meaning it was not cancerous)
The suffix for the word "fortunately" is -ly.
Fortunately the assailant was captured very quickly because he gave such a good description to the police.
"I ran towards the door and found that it had, fortuitously, been left open." It basically means 'luckily' or 'fortunately'.
It seems like there might be a typo in your question. Did you mean to ask about how to use the word "fortunately"? If so, you can use it at the beginning of a sentence to introduce a positive outcome or circumstance. For example, "Fortunately, the weather cleared up for our outdoor event."
Yes, "fortunately" can function as a fronted adverbial. A fronted adverbial is an adverb or adverbial phrase that appears at the beginning of a sentence to provide context, such as time, manner, or place. For example, in the sentence "Fortunately, we arrived just in time," "fortunately" is fronted to emphasize the positive aspect of the situation.
Fortunately is an adverb, yes.Some example sentences are:Fortunately, I have a backup copy.We fortunately arrive don time.