exceedingly
31exceedingly well read — Meaning Erudite and literate. Origin From Shakespeare s HenryIV Part 1 …
32excessively — exceedingly, excessively Both words came into use in the late 15c. Exceedingly (16c in its current meaning) means ‘very, extremely’, and is now used only with adjectives and adverbs (most often well): • His room was exceedingly cold P. Fitzgerald …
33BACTE`RIA — exceedingly minute organisms of the simplest structure, being merely cells of varied forms, in the shape of spheres, rods, or intermediate shapes, which develop in infusions of organic matter, and multiply by fission with great rapidity,… …
34Hella — exceedingly: hella good ; hella cool …
35Huge — exceedingly excellent; awesome; unreal …
36Seriously — exceedingly: seriously rich …
37Wuss-bag — exceedingly pathetic wuss …
38fogent — Exceedingly bright and radiant. The sun was fogent today due to the lack of clouds and the excellent air quality …
39instupetuous — Exceedingly grandiose in absurdity; surprisingly overdone; stupendously incredulous. Your rhymes are instupetuous, George. Your spelling is not …
40uberclempt — Exceedingly moved, choked up I was uberclempt when he serenaded me from the lawn …