realisticallyrea‧lis‧tic‧ally /rɪəˈlɪstɪkli/ adverb - Realistically, there was not much we could do to help.
- Proulx's novel realistically portrays life in early 20th century America.
- You can realistically expect to pay between $25 and $50 a ticket.
- Audio visual and special effects will allow visitors to realistically experience life at sea.
- Hopefully, it seeps down to your bones and then you can portray somebody like this accurately and as realistically as possible.
- May and June are, realistically, the most opportune time for such projects.
- Neither economic stabilisation, nor political calm, can realistically be achieved before the elections happen.
- Once this is done, the writer should observe how realistically each study phase can be completed.
- That is, what can be realistically added is relatively small, in the range of ten or fifteen percent.
- The time schedule or calendar is another indication of how carefully and realistically the proposal has been developed.
- This becomes worse when hierarchies are made realistically complex to reflect real-world data relationships.
VERB► expect· As for tomorrow's race, Jeremy can't realistically expect to finish in the first ten first time out.· In short, not the kind of team you realistically expect to blast into the Swell Sixteen.
nounrealismrealistrealityunrealityrealizationadjectiverealunrealrealistic ≠ unrealisticadverbrealreallyrealistically ≠ unrealisticallyverbrealize