From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishreasonablyrea‧son‧a‧bly /ˈriːzənəbli/ ●●○S3W3 adverb1[+adj/adverb]QUITE/FAIRLY quite or to a satisfactorydegree, but not completely
The car is in reasonably good condition.
He’s doing reasonably well at school.2FAIRin a way that is right or fair
He can’t reasonably be expected to have known that.3SENSIBLEin a sensible way
Despite her anger, she had behaved very reasonably.Examples from the Corpusreasonably• The several criticisms of the market economy are reasonablyaccurate and certainly too serious to ignore.• It was the high-school students who reasonably and responsibly found a solution to the problem.• Most industrialtribunalbuildings are purpose built and are reasonably comfortably equipped.• Thus the minimum cost of a reasonablydiversifiedportfolio would be 30,000-40,000.• How long before we can reasonably expect to see any improvement?• Chao is still in reasonably good health.• Dad's in reasonably good shape for a 68-year-old.• These securities are short-term, highly liquid securities with reasonably high yields.• Kevin is a hard worker and reasonablyintelligent but he has never been promoted.• Another might reasonablyreply that because we are animals, creatures of nature, consciousness and nature are inseparable.• You can buy a proprietarymix that will provide end residues that balancereasonably well - eventually.• The current state of Earth, some 4. 7 billion years later, is reasonably well known to us.• She speaks Spanishreasonably well.• A commonly proposed and reasonablyworkablealternative to constant per unit prices is the two-part tariffstructure.