Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Here, though, are a few restaurants that might not come trippingly to mind, yet offer a good time to all.
These things came out of Sonny trippingly; she spoke from the heart as a regular matter.
Don't worry: when the time comes, it will roll trippingly off your tongue.
There were any number of news stories that started out trippingly, then foundered in what was, to me, double talk.
And the woman rolled it off her tongue trippingly.
Extremely firm, Dor thought as he watched her move trippingly across the kitchen to the back door.
It is thought the word "meadow" was pluralized to come more trippingly off the tongue.
My German teacher is a cultivated man with four perfected languages coming trippingly from his tongue.
It fell trippingly from the tongue, at least.
He strove to recollect the sentences which had followed each other so trippingly during his morning's walk.
It didn't exactly emerge trippingly from his lips.
Naismith's flat Betan accent fell so trippingly from his tongue.
Let your Carroll fall trippingly off the tongue."
"And compliments still roll trippingly off your tongue," she retorted, drawing back.
This is a way of broadening the traditional territory to include subcultures like science, and the results don't exactly come trippingly off the tongue.
Sometimes it is a clear-cut matter of fatigue or inattention, speaking trippingly, without attending to meaning.
"Generativity" doesn't exactly roll trippingly from the tongue, but it's the book's crucial concept.
Infrastructure is not a word that comes trippingly off the tongue, and yet many invoke it as part of the solution to what ails us.
Some words fall trippingly from his lips; others, for emphasis, are spoken as if each were separated by a solemn comma.
'Juliana' comes trippingly off the tongue when I'm angry with you.'
Not really English, not really Shakespeare, but enough to exit trippingly.
It goes trippingly on the tongue.
Salmanazar, now-I find that name coming occasionally, trippingly from my lips, when I see the creature.
Does not flow trippingly off the tongue.)
Obviously, neither of those adverbs comes trippingly to the tongue, so famously is the modifier of choice.