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terribly

[ US /ˈtɛɹəbɫi/ ]
[ UK /tˈɛɹəbli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a terrible manner
    she sings terribly
  2. used as intensifiers
    terribly interesting
    I'm awful sorry

How To Use terribly In A Sentence

  • Those tiny little felt guys that I made for Amelia just before she was born have been loved a little and have ended up filthy and terribly pilled.
  • I leaned a minute against a Corinthian column; I lamented that no pontiff arrived with victims and aruspices, of whom I might inquire, what, in the name of birds and garbage, put me so terribly out of humour! for you must know I was very near being disappointed, and began to think Piranesi and Paolo Panini had been a great deal too colossal in their view of this venerable structure. Dreams Waking Thoughts and Incidents
  • Areas prone to flooding will suffer terribly as sea levels rise over the next century.
  • They are suffering terribly but their mind is perfect, so it is a living hell.
  • When you see this poor guy being followed everywhere he goes by hordes of people, it's actually terribly sad.
  • I progressed to high school the year before Frankie, and missed him terribly.
  • In comparison, the original mono track is distorted, indistinct, and terribly tinny, but for preservation's sake, it is nice to see it included here.
  • Den suffered terribly from stage fright .
  • People had become terribly troubled," he said, trying hard to imbue the word "troubled" with sympathy. Rewind radio: The Brown Years; Desert Island Discs; Craig Brown's Lost Diaries
  • By the late 1880s there was nothing terribly mysterious about getting a steam hammer to deliver a blow of so many tons.
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