ipso facto
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ by the fact itself; "ipso facto, her innocence was established"
irately
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irate manner; "`Get out,' he shouted irately"
ironically
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an ironic manner; "she began to mimic him ironically"
ironically
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ contrary to plan or expectation; "ironically, he ended up losing money under his own plan"
irrationally
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irrational manner; "they acted irrationally"
irregardless
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ regardless; a combination of irrespective and regardless sometimes used humorously
irregularly
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irregular manner; "the stomach mucosa was irregularly blackened"
irregularly
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ having an irregular form; "irregularly shaped solids"
irregularly
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ at an uneven rate; "the patient is breathing irregularly"
irregularly
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irregular manner; "her letters arrived irregularly"
irrelevantly
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irrelevant manner; "suddenly and irrelevantly, she asked him for money"
irreparably
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irreparable manner or to an irreparable degree
irreproachably
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irreproachable and blameless manner; "she had lived blamelessly until she met this man"
irresistibly
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ incapable of being resisted; "the candy looked overwhelmingly desirable to the dieting man"
irresolutely
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ lacking determination or decisiveness
irrespective
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in spite of everything; without regard to drawbacks; "he carried on regardless of the difficulties"
irresponsibly
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irresponsible manner; "he acted irresponsibly"
irretrievably
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irretrievable manner; "it is irretrievably lost"
irreverently
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ without respect; "the student irreverently mimicked the teacher in his presence"
irreverently
— Biord
– Engelsk
~ in an irreverent manner; "in the seventeenth century England had known fifty years of doctrinal quarrels and civil war; clergymen had been turned from their cures, and churches irreverently used"