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tremendously

[ US /tɹəˈmɛndəsɫi, tɹɪˈmɛndəsɫi/ ]
[ UK /tɹəmˈɛndəsli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. extremely
    he was enormously popular

How To Use tremendously In A Sentence

  • Not only was his analysis absolutely on target, he was tremendously self-assured, well spoken and telegenic.
  • People vary tremendously in their individual dietary requirements.
  • Newsletters provide a tremendously powerful means of publicly celebrating the successes of children and the school.
  • Steady on, the reason we men liked her was because she was a tremendously attractive and sexy piece of crumpet…
  • The spectacle of Xerxes's defeat tremendously reinforced the traditional conviction that pride goes before a fall.
  • Wall is a tremendously challenging artist, as his stuff essentially mocks both the Cartier-Bresson 'Decisive Moment' as self-glorifying bushwa, and the Modernist painters' photography-induced flight from Realism as cowardice. Kenneth Hite's Journal
  • I have tremendously fond memories of the Free Trade Hall, despite its general grottiness, and its poor acoustics.
  • Their breeding behaviour and how they and their chicks respond to stimuli is tremendously well studied, with the studies of Goethe, Tinbergen and others being classic, pioneering works in ethology. Archive 2006-02-01
  • Rodd literally jumped in his alarm, for there was a tremendously wild cissing from the pan and a horrible suggestion therewith that Mrs The Ocean Cat's Paw The Story of a Strange Cruise
  • It benefited tremendously from a good “high concept” and a great cast (especially Zach Galifainakis), but the execution was just plain mediocre. Top 10 Movies of 2009 » Scene-Stealers
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