How to Use famously in a Sentence
famously
adverb- The executive famously insisted on riding the bus to work every day.
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Steinbrenner famously pulled to the side of the road and called Judge.
— Barry M. Bloom, Sportico.com, 19 Oct. 2024 -
Harris famously wore Chucks with her pearls in the lead-up to the 2020 election.
— Julia Teti, WWD, 19 Aug. 2024 -
The three troubadours first famously shared the stage at the first Farm Aid benefit concert in 1985.
— George Varga, San Diego Union-Tribune, 27 Feb. 2024 -
And Fury Road, a movie with famously few lines of dialogue, left a lot of blanks.
— Eliana Dockterman, TIME, 8 May 2024 -
The pair famously travel to see both of their sons play throughout the season.
— CBS News, 10 Feb. 2023 -
Justin Bieber was famously close with Lentz, even briefly moving in with the pastor in 2014.
— Vulture, 26 May 2023 -
So, the sisters met each other in Dublin at the show where Swift famously got briefly stuck on a platform mid-show.
— Gil Kaufman, Billboard, 1 Aug. 2024 -
In March 2015, Malik famously quit One Direction amid the band's world tour at the time.
— Jay Stahl, USA TODAY, 19 Oct. 2024 -
While a few famously got lost on their way to port, this would ultimately be the last.
— Tim Stevens, Robb Report, 4 May 2023 -
The two-bedroom, four-bathroom apartment spans 1,700 square feet and the unit once famously housed the painter’s studio, as well.
— Emma Reynolds, Robb Report, 24 May 2023 -
In the Antarctic Ocean, orcas famously create waves to wash seals off ice floes.
— Victoria Sayo Turner, Smithsonian Magazine, 12 July 2023 -
Fall is the best season to visit, thanks to the state’s famously vibrant fall foliage.
— Cailey Rizzo, Travel + Leisure, 23 Jan. 2023 -
This most famously came to light with the exposure of the Panama Papers.
— Matthew Erskine, Forbes, 10 Feb. 2023 -
And then, famously, through bad contracts, John Fogerty lost all of his songs.
— Hank Shteamer, New York Times, 1 May 2023 -
At the beginning of the ground invasion in Iraq in 2003, David Petraeus, of course, famously asked the question, tell me how this ends.
— ABC News, 22 Oct. 2023 -
And scientists are, famously, many of us, on the spectrum.
— David Browne, Rolling Stone, 21 Sep. 2024 -
The evolution of the famously well-coiffed band is the topic of a Hulu and Disney+ docuseries coming out next month.
— Brian Niemietz, New York Daily News, 14 June 2024 -
The icon — plastered on posters all over her room, his face emblazoned on her T-shirts — had famously been dead for decades.
— Claretta Bellamy, NBC News, 14 Dec. 2023 -
Clearly, that $75 jump wasn’t enough to dissuade even the famously spendthrifty younger consumers.
— Byjane Thier, Fortune, 21 Oct. 2024 -
Two seasons ago – and now quite famously – Bobby Portis was the odd man out.
— Jim Owczarski, Journal Sentinel, 21 Apr. 2023 -
Mormons are famously clean-living, which is both a great good and much scorned by slobs who can’t keep their lives in order.
— Brian T. Allen, National Review, 20 Jan. 2024 -
She was famously born six weeks premature and too small to nurse from her mother, which put her care team at the Cincinnati Zoo in the hot seat.
— Evie Carrick, Travel + Leisure, 29 May 2024 -
Mill once famously had beef with Drake, who Rubin is also friends with.
— James R. Sanders, VIBE.com, 15 Aug. 2024 -
And even the famously more affordable beer has been hit by inflation, as sales are down.
— Chloe Berger, Fortune, 3 Feb. 2024 -
Chester was famously a threat to dogs in a Tampa neighborhood.
— Dewayne Bevil, Orlando Sentinel, 19 July 2024 -
That's the number of quarterbacks who were chosen all of last year in what was a famously weak class at the position.
— Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz, USA TODAY, 30 Apr. 2023 -
The two movies, both of which are nominated for best picture, famously opened in theaters on the same day in July 2023.
— USA TODAY, 11 Mar. 2024 -
Your childhood home famously hosted a constant flow of artists, thinkers, politicians.
— Mikey O'Connell, The Hollywood Reporter, 6 Dec. 2024 -
In many cases, the prosecution of an assault by a robot would likely follow the logic of charging the owner of a dog (Britain’s Princess Anne was famously prosecuted when her pitbull ‘Dotty’, bit two children).
— Mike O'Sullivan, Forbes, 7 Dec. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'famously.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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