Extremadamente in english

Extremely

pronunciation: ekstrimli part of speech: adverb
In gestures

extremadamente = grossly ; in the extreme ; darn ; intensely ; not half. 

Example: The cost implications of ill-advised or hastily prepared rules for American libraries catalogs would grossly transcend any short expenditures.Example: The main character displays a boastful attitude that smacks of hubris in the extreme.Example: However, as someone else said, people are pretty darn sensitive about terrorism, and the days of left-luggage may be over.Example: Such special duty can be intensely challenging, freeing creative energies that would otherwise lie dormant.Example: As a football fan, it wasn't half good to see two players move upfront, be mobile and look like they want to play with each other.

more:

» estar extremadamente delgadobe all(/nothing but) skin and bones .

Example: The boy was all skin and bones and needed the food and drink far more than Will did and anyway he could always ask the landlord for some = El niño estaba en los huesos y necesitaba comida y bebida mucho más que Will y, de todas formas, él siempre podría pedirle algo al casero.

» extremadamente + Adjetivoalarmingly + Adjetivoastronomically + Adjetivobleeding + Adjetivo/Nombre [Sirve para intensificar un sentimiento]extremely + Adjetivoimpossibly + Adjetivoincredibly + Adjetivodevastatingly + Adjetivodauntingly + Adjetivooutrageously + Adjetivoabysmally + Adjetivoawfully + Adjetivoshockingly + Adjetivobloody + Adjetivoblisteringly + Adjetivoinsanely + Adjetivoseverely + Adjetivo .

Example: As the quantity increased the printer's capital investment, which was always alarmingly high, rose with it, and his profit as a percentage of investment fell.

Example: To give this advice, the computer would have to store an astronomically large number of possible positions on the board.

Example: He had never seen the children's librarian so upset, she was one great bleeding resentment.

Example: Thus, the subject approach is extremely important in the access to information.

Example: Limitless flexibility sounds to be the answer but it is, of course, impossibly expensive and unacceptable aesthetically.

Example: We also know that large catalogs are not only incredibly expensive to maintain, but are increasingly impossible to use.

Example: The teacher flipped over the document and examined her scored evaluations: all, except for attendance and punctuality, were in the low 70's, a devastatingly dramatic plunge from the former heights of her 97 to 99 scores.

Example: This description suggests that OPAC searching is less dauntingly complex than it is often made out to be.

Example: On the other hand people passionately devoted to a hobby or sport or their work will endure without complaint conditions which less ardent folk think outrageously insupportable.

Example: Seventeenth-century English printing was abysmally poor, and there are few books that were not set in ill-cast, battered type, clumsily arranged and carelessly printed in brown ink on shabby paper.

Example: Searching these full-text files may be awfully confusing.

Example: Despite shockingly poor current resource levels, Cuban librarians are enthusiastically planning for better times in the future.

Example: I know a few guys that are dustbin men and it is bloody hard work for a average of £6.50 an hour.

Example: A colleague today showed me a cool, new browser that he's been using to browse the web at blisteringly fast speeds.

Example: I have a younger brother (14, to be exact), he's fucking losing it, he just entered high school and he's insanely insociable.

Example: Even an informative title is by nature of a title, succinct, and therefore severely limited in the quantity of information that can be conveyed.

» extremadamente caroprohibitively expensiveastronomically expensive .

Example: At the present time online catalogs seem to be prohibitively expensive for public libraries.

Example: Amid an astronomically expensive real estate boom, more and more Londoners are turning to houseboat life.

» extremadamente disputadofiercely-contested .

Example: The area now covered by metropolitan Atlanta was the scene of several fiercely-contested battles.

» extremadamente improbableunlikely to the extreme .

Example: The genetic structure of the human species makes such a possibility unlikely to the extreme.

» extremadamente polémicohighly controversial .

Example: In this documentary, Professor Richard Dawkins embarks on a highly controversial journey to show that religion is the root of all evil.

» extremadamente reñidofiercely-contested .

Example: The area now covered by metropolitan Atlanta was the scene of several fiercely-contested battles.

» ser extremadamente + Adjetivobe too + Adjetivo + by half .

Example: Bold, ambitious and in-your-face I've always considered them to be just too cocky by half.

Extremadamente synonyms

super in spanish: súper, pronunciation: supɜr part of speech: noun, adjective passing in spanish: paso, pronunciation: pæsɪŋ part of speech: noun highly in spanish: altamente, pronunciation: haɪli part of speech: adverb exceedingly in spanish: extremadamente, pronunciation: ɪksidɪŋli part of speech: adverb
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