naturally
naturally — adverb
1. happening or existing in the physical world of plants, animals, rocks, and weath
happening or existing in the physical world of plants, animals, rocks, and weather, without being created, changed, or added to by people
The cave was formed naturally over thousands of years by flowing water.
Honey is a naturally sweet food that needs no added sugar.
naturally + adjective describing inherent quality
Her hair curls naturally without any heat styling or chemicals.
Some vitamins occur naturally in fruits and green vegetables.
The water in this spring is naturally clear and clean enough to drink.
- by nature
equivalent phrase, interchangeable most of the time
- organically
specifically about food or materials grown without chemicals
- artificially
made or created by people rather than occurring in nature
文法句型
verb + naturally
naturally + adjective
用法筆記
Often appears before adjectives (naturally sweet, naturally clear) or after verbs of existence (occur naturally, form naturally, exist naturally).
常見錯誤
2. used about a quality or skill that has been part of a person's character since t
used about a quality or skill that has been part of a person's character since they were born, rather than one they developed later
Elena is naturally shy and takes time to warm up to new people.
naturally + adjective describing personality
Tuan was naturally good at mathematics from a very young age.
Some children are naturally more curious than their quieter classmates.
Liam is naturally left-handed, just like his father and grandfather.
Selim seems to be a naturally confident speaker who enjoys public attention.
- acquired
learned or developed through effort rather than present from birth
文法句型
naturally + adjective
用法筆記
The adjective that follows usually describes a personality trait (shy, confident, curious) or a talent (gifted, talented, good at something). Not used with physical states that change — you would not say *naturally hungry* or *naturally tired*.
常見錯誤
3. used to describe a skill or activity that someone can do very well without much
used to describe a skill or activity that someone can do very well without much effort, as if they were born with the ability for it
Swimming came naturally to Reema the first time she tried it.
come naturally to + person — skill is subject
Playing piano by ear comes naturally to Min without any formal lessons.
Making friends comes naturally to Stephanie wherever she travels or works.
The art of negotiation came naturally to Christopher, who could read people's intentions from the first handshake.
Cooking does not come naturally to Imani — she follows every recipe very carefully.
- effortlessly
adverb meaning without effort, but does not require the 'come' pattern
- easily
simpler word; 'do easily' replaces the entire construction
- with difficulty
requires hard work and practice
文法句型
come naturally to + noun
用法筆記
The only grammatical pattern is 'come naturally to [someone]', where the subject is the skill or activity and the object of 'to' is the person. Never transfer this pattern to other verbs: *Swim naturally to her* is incorrect unless you intend sense 1 or 5.
常見錯誤
4. used to say that something is not surprising because it is the normal or logical
used to say that something is not surprising because it is the normal or logical result of the situation being described
Naturally, the children were very excited about the trip to the zoo.
sentence adverb at clause start: Naturally, + clause
When Tuan offered to help, his mother naturally accepted right away.
mid-sentence: subject + naturally + verb
Naturally, the team felt disappointed after losing the championship match.
The restaurant was booked on Friday — naturally, it is the most popular spot in town.
Elena studied for weeks, so she naturally passed the exam with top marks.
- of course
stronger and more informal; implies the outcome is obvious, not just expected
- obviously
emphasises visible or undeniable evidence
- understandably
focuses on the emotional or logical reasons behind a reaction
- surprisingly
indicates the opposite of what was expected
文法句型
Naturally, + clause
subject + naturally + verb
用法筆記
As a sentence adverb, naturally signals that the speaker regards the outcome as predictable given the circumstances. It can appear at the start of a clause (Naturally, she was upset), inserted after the subject (she naturally said yes), or after a dash or comma near the end of a sentence.
常見錯誤
5. in a relaxed, ordinary way that does not feel forced, fake, or designed to impre
in a relaxed, ordinary way that does not feel forced, fake, or designed to impress other people
Just act naturally during the interview and tell them about your skills.
common collocation: act naturally
The children played naturally in the garden without any arguments or tears.
Élise smiled naturally for the photograph, not needing to fake anything.
After a few minutes the conversation began to flow naturally among the group.
The dog behaved naturally around the visitors, wagging its tail happily.
- normally
closest synonym; interchangeable in most contexts
- unaffectedly
more formal; describes behaviour free from pretence
- casually
overlaps in meaning but emphasises informality rather than genuineness
- unnaturally
in a forced, stiff, or artificial manner
- affectedly
in a way that tries too hard to impress
文法句型
verb + naturally
用法筆記
Commonly follows verbs of behaviour (act, behave) or appearance (smile, walk, speak). Describes a manner that is genuine and unaffected, in contrast to acting in a forced or artificial way.