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[ US /fəˈnɑmənəɫ/ ]
[ UK /fɪnˈɒmɪnə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. exceedingly or unbelievably great
    the bomb did fantastic damage
    Samson is supposed to have had fantastic strength
    phenomenal feats of memory
  2. of or relating to a phenomenon
    phenomenal science

How To Use phenomenal In A Sentence

  • The euphoria reached phenomenal levels when the kids got a chance to share the stage with their stars.
  • Regardless of whether those pessimistic readings of the debate are correct, and of whether the zombie idea itself is sound or incoherent, it continues to stimulate fruitful work on consciousness, physicalism, phenomenal concepts, and the relations between imaginability, conceivability, and possibility. Zombies
  • There is some disagreement as to whether phenomenalists should be labeled "idealists."
  • She believed that it was Wittgenstein's lectures, for example, that freed her from the trap of phenomenalism Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe
  • Such a proposal is distinct from pantheistic notions which equate God with the natural world, because D'Espagnat relegates the natural world - the world of space, time and matter - to what Kant referred to as the 'phenomenal' world, the world produced by the modus operandi of our minds upon the noumenal world. Archive 2009-03-01
  • I think it's schematical in regards to these kind of numbers. 9\% growth on the size of the Chinese economy as is relates to welding as a phenomenal number and one of which we are again quite bullish about. SeekingAlpha.com: Home Page
  • A forest as visual object is not phenomenally 'mental'.
  • We think countenancing any other position would totally undermine our members going about their duty and put them at phenomenal risk.
  • Yet restoring the status quo ante will be phenomenally hard. Times, Sunday Times
  • The group have been phenomenally successful in Europe.
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