Secondarily, the thing itself is ambiguously said to be true in the sense of being signified as it is.
Some chaps like him," the chaps in question would ambiguously reply.
Poggio likewise mentions the building which Gibbon ambiguously says be "might have overlooked.
He looked up, and found himself fronted by the no longer wholly enigmatical, but still ambiguouslysmiling picture of his father.
For contradictories are positive and negative in essence and, when least ambiguously stated, also in form.
A synod, convened by the caliph, ambiguously censured their rashness.
The concluding sentence, ambiguously introduced by the words so werden auch, is tacked on to the preceding argument.
By the end of September Oldmeadow and Barney were in training, one on the Berkshire and one on the Wiltshire downs, and Meg was ambiguously restored to her family at Coldbrooks.
Mrs. Toner wore a ruffled dress and of her face little remained distinct but the dark gaze--forceful and ambiguously gentle.
I have mentioned in the body of the work that Sir Joshua, certainly the greatest master of colour we have yet had in England, frequently speaks ambiguously of many of Rembrandt's pictures.
Ormond's deportment was of an unexampled tenor, as well as that evil which he had so ambiguously predicted.
The evils which were darkly and ambiguously predicted thronged to her memory.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ambiguously" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.