These examples are sourced from occasionally on Ludwig.guru.
"When we are on the tube, occasionally I have to say to a member of the public that my son is autistic and that I'm sorry he is staring." — theguardian.com
"If there is one thing that has occasionally held her back, it has been her movement, with her tall frame not always easy to manoeuvre quickly enough." — theguardian.com
"In an episode broadcast in Britain in 2012, Peppa Pig and family are introduced to Gabriella Goat, who shows Peppa around her village in Italy while occasionally bleating." — theguardian.com
"I had been prepared to hate it at times, even occasionally to regret coming, but I hadn't expected it to be a constant struggle." — theguardian.com
"Boats are occasionally owned outright, but more often are subject to loans, or are the direct asset of another person in the village." — theguardian.com
Examples sourced from https://ludwig.guru/s/occasionally
| Phrase | Context |
|---|---|
| sometimes | More common in casual speech; implies a slightly higher frequency than occasionally. |
| from time to time | A common idiomatic phrase often placed at the end of a sentence. |
| periodically | Suggests that the event happens at somewhat regular intervals. |
| once in a while | More informal and conversational than the single-word adverb. |
| infrequently | More formal; emphasizes the rarity of the event rather than just the occurrence. |
| on occasion | A slightly more formal prepositional phrase used as an adverbial. |
| Expression | Function | Register | Typical Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| occasionally | Expresses low frequency | Neutral | Mid-position or Initial |
The adverb is highly flexible and can be placed at the beginning, middle, or end of a sentence. For the most balanced emphasis, place it in the mid-position before the main verb or after the first auxiliary verb.
While both describe non-continuous actions, occasionally typically implies a lower frequency than sometimes. It suggests an event is an exception or happens only "on occasion," whereas sometimes feels more frequent and regular.
The word is a common source of errors because learners often forget it requires a double consonant in two places. Remember that it is derived from "occasion," so it must have two 'c's and, as an adverb ending in -ly, it requires two 'l's.
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