fundamentally

[ US /ˌfəndəˈmɛnəɫi, ˌfəndəˈmɛntəɫi/ ]
[ UK /fˌʌndəmˈɛntə‍li/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in essence; at bottom or by one's (or its) very nature
    the argument was essentially a technical one
    He is basically dishonest
    for all his bluster he is in essence a shy person
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How To Use fundamentally In A Sentence

  • Among an ever-improving crop of pivotmen, Duncan is still the most dependable and fundamentally sound.
  • The severity, universality, complexity of peasant burden overweight, is to determined fundamentally that solving peasant burden overweight needs long period of time and arduousness of problem.
  • The idea of demons in New York was therefore fundamentally absurd. THE GREAT AND SECRET SHOW
  • The conclusions of the report are fundamentally wrong .
  • Our legal system is fundamentally an adversary system - and this solution would betray its very nature.
  • Going into a somewhat different trajectory, specifically to continue a line of speculation from a previous post on an African bridge house: can someone be fundamentally altered — like the corn they're cultivating to produce cancer cures — while living quasi-permanently in flourescent-lit dampness and hermetic seclusion, detached from the vagaries of weather, time and natural pollination, amidst pure geology? Cave Pharming
  • Feminist folkloristics, as developed in the United States and Canada, understands gender as a fundamentally sociocultural construct.
  • Here's where the fundies fundamentally disagree.
  • Eustache always retains a trace of dandyism, whereas Pialat is fundamentally a proletarian.
  • Fundamentally, there is little to choose between the extremities of right and left in politics.
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