0 in a way that is interesting, strange, or funny because of being very different from what you would expect: --
1 in a way that is different or opposite from the result you would expect: --
Perhaps ironically, these processes themselves constrain evolutionary outcomes.
Perhaps ironically, the author's commentary and explanation, in psychosocial terms, of her casework examples, could have been more extensive.
Ironically, many of the writers discussed in the essay were motivated by opposition to nationalism - the nationalism of the state.
Therefore, each technologically crafted cry and artificially extended joyous moan ironically testifies to the unavoidable and primitive dictates of human physiology.
Ironically, among atmosphere, crust and mantle, the largest reservoir (interior) is the least defined.
The social and psychological consequences of consumerism are, as we have seen, a conformity and passivity that is ironically experienced as individuality and freedom.
Ironically, their number contained not a single political martyr, only five convicted felons and two madmen.
For widows, the patriarchal authority held by their husbands seemed, ironically, to become even more pronounced after their husband's deaths.