How to use in-sentence of “nominally”:
+ The term came to be used to describe militant bands nominally associated with the free-state cause.
+ For example, one could see the nominally fiat money of Cuba as being tied to sugar prices, since a lack of hard currency paying for sugar means less foreign goods per peso in Cuba itself.
+ The Governor-General was commonly known as the Viceroy of India because of his secondary role as Britain’s representative to these nominally independent princely states.
+ He ran as a nominally independent candidate supported by the Green Party in the Austrian presidential election, 20162016 presidential election, and finished second in the first round before winning the second round against far-right candidate Norbert Hofer.
+ Article also contains synthesis/OR even though nominally sourced.
+ The first widespread use of “Palestinian” as an endonym to refer to the nationalismnationalist concept of a Palestinian people by the local Arabic-speaking population of Palestine began prior to the outbreak of World War I, The Palestinian National Authority, officially established as a result of the Oslo Accords, is an interim administrative body nominally responsible for governance in Palestinian population centres in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
+ In a historical context, colonies should be distinguished from protectorates and protected states, which though under British control, were nominally independent states, whereas colonies were part of the British state.
+ Far Eastern Republic, sometimes called the Chita Republic, was a nominally independent state established at Blagoveshchensk, covering the former Russian Far East and Siberia east of Lake Baikal on April 6, 1920.