Adverb
ubiquitously (comparative more ubiquitously, superlative most ubiquitously)
In a ubiquitous manner.
In people with sIBM, the muscle cells display “flags” telling the immune system that they are infected or damaged (the muscles ubiquitously express MHC class I antigens) and this immune process leads to the death of muscle cells. Source: Internet
In Tangier, the ubiquitously veiled and shrouded woman loudly broadcast the subservient female role. Source: Internet
Modulating nucleosome structure Eukaryotic genomes are ubiquitously associated into chromatin; however, cells must spatially and temporally regulate specific loci independently of bulk chromatin. Source: Internet
As the Hanukkah season approaches, chocolate, jam and custard filled have started to appear ubiquitously in bakeries and pastry shops around the country, wafting invitingly to the nostrils of passersby. Source: Internet
Text and Whatsapp messages, telephone calls and even town criers were announcing ubiquitously, incessantly. Source: Internet
For your reading to stick, you’d have to demonstrate the plausibility (not simply possibility) your demon/angel reading and put it side by side with the fact that the ANE was ubiquitously polytheistic. Source: Internet