phenomenally

[ UK /fɪnˈɒmɪnə‍li/ ]
[ US /fəˈnɑmənəɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. to a phenomenal degree
    his reaction was phenomenally quick
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How To Use phenomenally In A Sentence

  • Yet it is a phenomenally important actor in the sovereign debt saga. Times, Sunday Times
  • And a Democratic presidential candidate invoking that election, at this time, is phenomenally blockheaded. Obama: I Take Hillary At Her Word On Bobby Kennedy Gaffe
  • ˜presentation™ as equivalent to the notion of phenomenally conscious experience, as this is understood in other writers. Consciousness and Intentionality
  • That woman is doing "phenomenally" well now, Dr. Frank Papay, a member of the transplant team and chair of the Dermatology and Plastic Surgery Institute at Cleveland Clinic, said yesterday. Boston.com Most Popular
  • A perceived mirror surface is not transparent, although we see phenomenally localized optic qualities behind this surface.
  • We also know that many species are caught in phenomenally large numbers by fishing them, typically as by-catch from longline fishing worldwide, but also from trawls and gill net, than any other kinds of fishery.
  • In an obscure way, one seems to imagine a phenomenally empty physical space into which phenomena are then projected in a mystical way.
  • One of the continuing sources of musicological interest in polka is the phenomenally hybrid nature of the genre.
  • The naïve realist is committed, then, to the claim that the kind of phenomenally conscious episode that occurs when one perceives the world is not one that could be occurring were one hallucinating. Petty Injuries
  • Phenomenally successful, he left an estate valued at over $100 million.
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