hopefully
/ˈhəʊpfʊlɪ/adverb
1
- in a hopeful manner满怀希望地, 有希望地:
he rode on hopefully.
他满怀希望地策马前行。
2
- sentence adverb it is to be hoped that希望是, 有望:
hopefully it should be finished by next year.
这事有望在明年完成。
USAGE
The traditional sense of hopefully,'in a hopeful manner', has been used since the 17th century. In the second half of the 20th century a new use as a sentence adverb arose, meaning 'it is to be hoped that', as in hopefully ,we'll see you tomorrow. This second use is now much commoner than the first use, accounting for more than 90 per cent of citations for hopefully in the British National Corpus. It is, however, widely believed to be incorrect. Why should this be? People do not criticize other sentence adverbs, e.g. sadly(as in sadly, her father died last year) or fortunately(as in fortunately, he recovered). Part of the reason is that hopefully is a rather odd sentence adverb: while many others, such as sadly, regrettably, and clearly, may be paraphrased as 'it is sad/regrettable/clear that' ..., this is not possible with hopefully. Nevertheless, it is clear that use of hopefully has become a shibboleth of 'correctness' in the language in the late 20th century - even if the arguments on which this is based are not particularly strong - and it is wise to be aware of this in formal or written contexts.