Adverb
serendipitously (comparative more serendipitously, superlative most serendipitously)
By serendipity; by blind luck in combination with wisdom; by fortunate accident.
From early 2002 until 24 February 2006 it was estimated to have a 1 in 10,000 chance of impacting Earth on June 1, 2101. citation It was removed from the risk table on 24 February 2006 when it was serendipitously rediscovered. Source: Internet
PCP was actually discovered serendipitously by Victor Maddox, a chemist at Parke-Davis in Michigan, while investigating synthetic analgesic agents. Source: Internet
A. Doing the radio show has serendipitously led to putting on some fantastic shows at The F.M. Kirby Center. Source: Internet
I get ideas from poems, fairy tales, words I find serendipitously in the dictionary when I'm looking up other words, from recipes and folk tales, from empty bottles of shampoo, from dried-out limes that got pushed to the back of the fridge. Source: Internet
Well, this is actually an unscheduled post on the Best Read With Vegemite tour, because it serendipitously came up last night. Source: Internet
I had actually been interviewing painters to do the custom wall treatment when I serendipitously found a talented decorative painter while having lunch a few weeks back with an art consultant friend at Ponte in West Hollywood. Source: Internet