Extraordinarily
1Extraordinarily — Ex*traor di*na*ri*ly, adv. In an extraordinary manner or degree. [1913 Webster] …
2extraordinarily — adverb especially BrE 1 (+ adj/adv) extremely: extraordinarily beautiful/difficult/successful etc: an extraordinarily beautiful young boy 2 in a way that seems strange: I m afraid Jane can behave quite extraordinarily at times …
3extraordinarily — ex|traor|di|na|ri|ly [ıkˈstro:dənərıli US ıkˌstro:rdnˈerıli, ˌekstrəˈo:rdn erıli] adv especially BrE 1.) [+ adjective/adverb] extremely ▪ We were extraordinarily lucky. 2.) in a way that seems strange ▪ Why had James behaved so extraordinarily? …
4extraordinarily — ex|traor|di|nar|i|ly [ ık strɔrdn,erəli ] adverb * 1. ) extremely: He has served his country extraordinarily well. It was an extraordinarily difficult situation. 2. ) in a way that seems strange or unusual …
5extraordinarily */ — UK [ɪkˈstrɔː(r)d(ə)nərəlɪ] / US [ɪkˈstrɔrd(ə)nˌerəlɪ] adverb 1) extremely It was an extraordinarily difficult situation. He has served his country extraordinarily well. 2) in a way that seems strange or unusual …
6extraordinarily — adv. Extraordinarily is used with these adjectives: ↑beautiful, ↑clever, ↑complex, ↑complicated, ↑detailed, ↑difficult, ↑effective, ↑exciting, ↑generous, ↑gifted, ↑handsome, ↑ …
7extraordinarily — extraordinary ► ADJECTIVE 1) very unusual or remarkable. 2) (of a meeting) specially convened rather than being one of a regular series. 3) (of an official) specially employed: Ambassador Extraordinary. DERIVATIVES extraordinarily adverb… …
8extraordinarily — adverb extremely (Freq. 1) she was inordinately smart it will be an extraordinarily painful step to negotiate • Syn: ↑inordinately • Derived from adjective: ↑extraordinary, ↑inordinate ( …
9extraordinarily burdensome requirement — index imposition (excessive burden) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
10extraordinarily — adverb see extraordinary …