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Somehow   /sˈəmhˌaʊ/   Listen
adverb
Somehow  adv.  In one way or another; in some way not yet known or designated; by some means; as, the thing must be done somehow; he lives somehow. "By their action upon one another they may be swelled somehow, so as to shorten the length." Note: The indefiniteness of somehow is emphasized by the addition of or other. "Although youngest of the familly, he has somehow or other got the entire management of all the others."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Somehow" Quotes from Famous Books



... friend in the Lobby. He'd come along to handle press relations and had gotten romantic about the countryside, never having been out of a city before. He hired a guide and went hunting, eighty miles beyond the last outpost of civilization. Somehow, he got his hand on a gun, though only guides were supposed to touch them, managed to overcome its safety devices, and then pulled the trigger with the ...
— Badge of Infamy • Lester del Rey

... by his side and sobbed without restraint. Yet her grief was less for him than for herself,—rather, perhaps, for them both. Somehow they had missed the beautiful dream they had dreamed together eight years before in the beer-garden. She realized bitterly that their married life, which should have been so wonderful, had come to the petty reality of these latter days. So she sobbed and sobbed, her ...
— One Woman's Life • Robert Herrick

... his presence he became quite another man and—strange to say!—the change was not in his favour. It did not suit him to be gentle and soft. Sympathy he could not call forth in any one anyhow; such was his destiny! He belonged to that class of persons to whom has somehow been granted the privilege of authority over others; but nature had denied him the gifts essential for the justification of such a privilege. Having received no education, not being distinguished by intelligence, he ought not to have revealed himself; possibly his malignancy had ...
— The Jew And Other Stories • Ivan Turgenev

... was always hazarding prophecies about the weather, which somehow never turned out according to his prediction. The vanes on the church-steeples seemed to take fiendish pleasure in humiliating the dear old gentleman. If he said it was going to be a clear day, a dense sea-fog was pretty certain to set in before ...
— The Story of a Bad Boy • Thomas Bailey Aldrich

... king, and soon set all his soldiers scouring the country for a girl with a lance wound in her leg. For two days the search went on, and then it was somehow discovered that the only person with a lance wound in the leg was the princess herself. The king, greatly agitated, went off to tell the jogi, and to assure him that there must be some mistake. But of course the jogi was prepared for this, and had ...
— The Lilac Fairy Book • Andrew Lang


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