definition
Frequent.
definition
Frequently, many times.
example
I often walk to work when the weather is nice.
Poor people are often sick.
Oh, well, you know people often invent things.
We choose it much more often than we should.
People are often victims of their own natures.
Some things never grew boring no matter how often they were repeated.
It is often still warm.
He was often making trouble among his neighbors.
The old horse panted a little, and had to stop often to get his breath.
Gabriel's visits weren't often, but Rhyn had grown to like him.
How often had she heard how dangerous abandoned mines were?
These assumptions are often wrong.
How can he remember well his ignorance--which his growth requires--who has so often to use his knowledge?
An old peasant whom Prince Andrew in his childhood had often seen at the gate was sitting on a green garden seat, plaiting a bast shoe.
Often when he went his rounds I clung to his coat tails while he collected and punched the tickets.
He danced with you that often and didn't tell you his name?
She had always been a recluse at heart, often declining a social outing with her friends so that she could be alone with a book or her writing.
Often times both are absent when love is involved.
Often, when he was a little lad, he took long walks among the trees with his mother.
Consider the pan you most often cook in today.
Fred O'Connor's usual behavior was often erratic.
Obviously it wasn't something he often did.
Maybe hearing Mary say it so often had burned it into his brain.
These countries, particularly in the Balkans, were often small and tended toward war.
When picking up her mail at the post office, she often talked to Adrena.
Cynthia confessed they didn't attend as often as they should— as much as she did when her son was at home.
Her father was hard to read and often unapproachable, but he cared for her in his own special way.
She wandered the mansion as she often did, restless and starving.
She returned to this thought often as they traveled for two days.
They had given Martha a telephone card and asked she contact them as soon and as often as she could.
He didn't have that position because he was a male, as her friends often thought.
But he was still headstrong and ill-tempered; and he was often in trouble with the other sailors.
But there is any quantity of oatmeal, which we often cook for breakfast.
If we keep cool and moist, and meet with no accidents, we often live for five years.
He left early each Friday afternoon, often returning late on Monday morning.
He was often sighted strutting down the roadside.
After meeting Princess Mary, though the course of his life went on externally as before, all his former amusements lost their charm for him and he often thought about her.
Baby Claire was often in evidence in our work place, sleeping on mother's arm or in her file cabinet remodeled crib, or supping on Martha's breast.
If a man was obliged to go from one city to another, he often rode on horseback.
In history he is often called the Grand Monarch.
With skin cancer, like all diseases, over time some people get better and some people get worse, and often we really don't know why.
Sometimes countries simply nationalize industries, so that an enterprise once owned by a private company, often a foreign-based one, is taken over by the government or "the people."
But they were too often successful.
Knowledge often consists of the rolled-up conclusions from many pieces of data.
Deidre crossed to him, unafraid of the creature whose appearance often made grown Immortals quake and grovel.
His new schedule often sent him to bed early and kept him there until the last moment.
Several days of festivity and merry-making followed, for such old friends did not often meet and there was much to be told and talked over between them, and many amusements to be enjoyed in this delightful country.
We often see other technologies race toward a point and then stop growing along that axis.
I should start charging you for taking the edge off as often as I do.
Does that happen often?
On her walks at Lover's Lane near Evelyn's row house, she'd often seen couples entranced by the rhythmic movement of waves stand at a railing, the man's arms wrapped around the woman in front of him, his chin on her head.