Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Interestingly \In"ter*est*ing*ly\, adv. In an interesting manner.
Wiktionary
adv. in an interesting way
WordNet
adv. in an interesting manner; "when he ceases to be just interestingly neurotic and...gets locked up"- Time [ant: uninterestingly]
Usage examples of "interestingly".
Interestingly enough, when adrenochrome is injected into normal human subjects, temporary psychotic states resembling those of mental illness are produced.
Interestingly, the pair going down the east side and also had experiences with the grid, but they had less hours, overall, on the big amps than either he or Connie, and maybe they were less emotional, but nothing major happened to them.
More interestingly, perhaps, was the fact that Ann Campbell was spread-eagled on her back, her wrists and ankles bound to tent pegs with cord.
Then, leaving Sunny behind in the kitchen, they walked into the dining room, Klaus carrying a bowl of the interestingly shaped noodles and Violet carrying the pot of puttanesca sauce and a large ladle with which to serve it.
Interestingly enough, two hospitals have reported the theft of venipuncture, blood bank, and chemical lab supplies.
Megan answered freely, knowledgeably, interestingly enough to make Amanda think--and not for the first time--that she liked Megan a lot.
Brazil, Gypsy, Marquoz, centauroid Mavra Chang, and, interestingly, Yua.
Interestingly enough, the affected parts of the brain were isodense, which is to say that they had the same density as the healthy parts of the brain surrounding them.
Interestingly, this point has led critics of the sanctions to blame the United States and the United Nations for the problems Iraq has experienced since the Gulf War.
At twenty-eight, living off book reviews and social security, pale and thin and interestingly dissolute, most typically to be seen wearing a col-larless white shirt and jeans tucked into misshapen brown bootslooking like the kind of ex-public-schoolboy who, perhaps, did some drug-impaired carpentering or gardening for the good and the great with his fiery politics and his riveting love affairs in which he was usually the crueller, Richard Tull published his first novel, Aforethought, in Britain and America.
His name was Henry, a young affable man in his mid-twenties, lean, well buffed, with an interestingly piratical gleam.
In the prose version of Namárië, Tolkien interestingly reorganized both of these to subject-verb-object constructions: Elentári ortanë máryat, lumbulë undulávë ilyë tier.
Interestingly, three of the abstainers and two of the make-a-deal faction moved to the war column, and two voting originally for war dropped off the voting board.
Interestingly this understanding, particularly on the part of a woman who has been the victim of an antibiological conditioning program, as some Earth females, can be received as a liberating and joyful revelation, permitting them then in good conscience to yield at least, as they have long wished, to their femininity.
The woman who fears she cannot please men then sometimes tends to feel hostility toward them, perhaps turning her own rage and inward disappointment outward, laying the blame upon them, and developing the obvious defensive reactions of belittling sexuality and its significance, and attempting, interestingly, to become manlike herself, to be one with them, though in an aggressive, competitive manner, often attempting to best them, as though one of themselves.