different between extremely vs phenomenally

extremely

English

Alternative forms

  • extreamely, extreamly (obsolete)

Etymology

extreme +? -ly

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?ks?t?i?mli/

Adverb

extremely (comparative more extremely, superlative most extremely)

  1. (degree) To an extreme degree.

Derived terms

  • extremely low frequency

Synonyms

  • See Thesaurus:extremely

Translations

extremely From the web:

  • what extremely mean
  • what extremely muscular horses
  • what's extremely high blood pressure
  • what's extremely low blood pressure
  • what's extremely flammable
  • what's extremely cold
  • what's extremely large
  • what's extremely in french


phenomenally

English

Alternative forms

  • phænomenally (rare)

Etymology

phenomenal +? -ly

Adverb

phenomenally (comparative more phenomenally, superlative most phenomenally)

  1. In a manner that is extraordinary or amazing.
    The tennis player's serve was phenomenally fast.
  2. In terms of phenomena.
    • 2014, Berit Brogard, Does Perception Have Content? (page 97)
      The 'old-look' and the 'bald-pink-and-wrinkled-look' are, in this context at least, one and the same. Phenomenally speaking, that is, the predicates 'old' and 'bald, pink, and wrinkled' here are equivalent […]

Synonyms

  • extraordinarily, prodigiously, remarkably

Related terms

  • phenomenal
  • phenomenalism
  • phenomenalistic
  • phenomenology
  • phenomenon

Translations

phenomenally From the web:

  • phenomenally meaning
  • what does phenomenal mean
  • what does phenomenally
  • what does phenomenally black mean
  • what does phenomenally good mean
  • what does phenomenal mean in english
  • what do phenomenally meaning
  • spell phenomenal
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like