mi ‧ rac ‧ u ‧ lous /mɪˈrækjələs, mɪˈrækjʊləs/ BrE AmE adjective
1 . very good, completely unexpected, and often very lucky:
She made a miraculous recovery from her injuries.
They had a miraculous escape when their car plunged into a river.
2 . a miraculous action or event is believed to be caused by God, and is impossible according to the ordinary laws of nature:
miraculous powers of healing
—miraculously adverb :
Miraculously, no one was killed.
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THESAURUS
▪ lucky happening because of good luck, or bringing you good luck:
a lucky guess
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Seven is considered a lucky number.
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It’s lucky that I’ve got some spare keys.
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Italy got a lucky goal in the last five minutes of the game.
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‘How did you know he’d be there?’ ‘It was a lucky guess.’
▪ fortunate happening because of good luck. Fortunate is more formal than lucky :
It was extremely fortunate that there was no one in the building when the bomb went off.
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I’m in the fortunate position of doing a job I love.
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Some plants actually prefer a lot of shade, which is fortunate for gardeners choosing plants for gloomy corners.
▪ it’s a good thing (that) ( also it’s a good job (that) British English ) spoken used when saying that there would have been problems if something had not happened:
It’s a good thing that you brought an umbrella with you.
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It’s a good job I’m here to help.
▪ miraculous extremely lucky in a way that is almost unbelievable:
A teenager had a miraculous escape last night when the car she was travelling in overturned.
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The doctor gave her a month to live but she made a miraculous recovery.
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It was miraculous that no one was seriously injured in the accident.
▪ fortuitous /fɔːˈtjuːətəs $ fɔːrˈtuː-, fɔːˈtjuːɪtəs $ fɔːrˈtuː-/ formal happening because of good luck:
a fortuitous decision
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a fortuitous coincidence
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It was fortuitous that no one else was hurt.
▪ a fluke /fluːk/ informal something that happens by chance, not because of skill or good judgement:
The goal was a fluke.
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By a fluke, he managed to get the question right.
▪ be in the right place at the right time used when saying that someone is lucky and the situation is right for them:
Making money from buying property is easy – you just have to be in the right place at the right time.