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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Customarily

Customarily \Cus"tom*a*ri*ly\ (-[asl]*r[i^]*l[y^]), adv. In a customary manner; habitually.

Wiktionary
customarily

adv. 1 (context manner English) In the customary manner; as is custom 2 (context frequency English) Under normal circumstances, normally.

WordNet
customarily

adv. by custom; according to common practice; "children are customarily expected to be seen but not heard"

Usage examples of "customarily".

Of course, in later years, when players customarily resembled skyscrapers, men of his build would be at a severe disadvantage and might not even make the squad, let alone a team.

Where Adams stood foursquare to the world, shoulders back, Jefferson customarily stood with his arms folded tightly across his chest.

AUTUMN BROUGHT CLEAR, cool days, with starlit nights cold enough for log fires at City Tavern, where Adams customarily dined.

Abigail Adams was customarily that of the wiser, slightly superior adviser.

With breakfast finished, weather permitting, John and John Quincy customarily set off for a five- or six-mile walk in the Bois de Boulogne before getting down to work.

Breakfast was at eight, and they saw each other again at dinner, customarily served at three.

He wrote almost no letters at all of the kind in which he customarily unburdened himself--in large part because Abigail was with him, but also because he had almost no time to himself.

BROUGHT CLEAR, cool days, with starlit nights cold enough for log fires at City Tavern, where Adams customarily dined.

He held himself very straight as he entered the house, and the boyish grin with which he customarily greeted the butler had given place to a dignified nod.

She customarily talked, not to him, but to his reflection over her shoulder, when, indeed, she took her eyes from herself.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who customarily occupied quarters in two tones of grey, and most missionaries, who chose brown.

Another witness was Peter Pitseolak, a local artist who had customarily piloted 11BC ships into Dorset but on this, of all occasions, had been rebuffed by Waters, who thought he could outdo Smellie by bringing the ship in himself A few hours after the vessel went aground, the captain ordered everyone ashore in lifeboats, but the mood was still buoyant because it was a beautiful windless day and except for her ten-degree list to stern, the ship seemed unharmed.

Contests of this sort, most often involving criminals and impoverished soldiers of fortune, offer prizes of amnesty or gold and are customarily sponsored by rich men to win the approval of the populace of their cities.

He sang a kayak-making song, customarily sung to the leather, wood and sinew, with which he worked, that it not betray him in the polar sea.

Alastair Bocker was not, of course, entirely unknown to us: it was that of an eminent geographer, a name customarily followed by several groups of initials.