luckily
luckily — adverb
1. used to show that something good happened because chance or fortune was on your
used to show that something good happened because chance or fortune was on your side, especially when a less desirable result could easily have happened instead
Luckily, Haruto remembered to bring his umbrella before the rain started.
sentence adverb opening a clause
Maeve slipped on the wet kitchen floor but luckily she did not break anything.
conjunction + luckily mid-clause
Luckily for Anjali, the last bus home was running ten minutes late that evening.
Aaron had left his passport at home, but luckily his sister found it in time.
The storm missed the town completely, luckily, so all the families were safe.
- fortunately
more formal and common in written English; same core meaning
- thankfully
adds a sense of relief or gratitude toward the outcome
- mercifully
suggests relief from something unpleasant or painful that was avoided
- happily
emphasises the pleasing nature of the result rather than the role of chance
- unfortunately
the most common opposite; describes negative outcomes due to chance
- unluckily
less common than unfortunately; directly reverses the meaning of luckily
文法句型
Luckily, + clause
luckily for + noun phrase
but luckily + clause
用法筆記
Luckily is a sentence adverb — it modifies the whole statement, not just a single verb. It is most common at the start of a sentence followed by a comma, but can also appear mid-sentence after a conjunction such as but or and, or at the end for emphasis.