Alternative forms
edit
Etymology
edit
extreme + -ly
Pronunciation
edit
extremely (comparative more extremely, superlative most extremely)
- (degree) To an extreme degree.
2015 April 14, “America's First All-Girl Quintuplets Born in Texas Hospital”, in Time[1]:The National Center for Health Statistics' latest data indicate that quintuplets are extremely rare, with 66 reported sets of five or more babies in 2013.
Synonyms
edit
Derived terms
edit
Translations
edit
to an extreme degree
- Armenian: չափազանց (hy) (čʻapʻazancʻ), սաստիկ (hy) (sastik)
- Bengali: প্রচণ্ড (bn) (proconḍo)
- Bulgarian: кра́йно (bg) (krájno)
- Catalan: extremadament (ca)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 非常 (zh) (fēicháng), 極其/极其 (zh) (jíqí), 極/极 (zh) (jí), 極度/极度 (zh) (jídù), (used after the adjective) 極了/极了 (zh) (jíle)
- Czech: extrémně (cs)
- Dutch: uitermate (nl), extreem (nl)
- Esperanto: treege
- Finnish: äärimmäisen (fi), erittäin (fi)
- French: extrêmement (fr), vachement (fr) (slang)
- Galician: extremadamente
- Georgian: უაღრესად (uaɣresad), უკიდურესად (uḳiduresad)
- German: extrem (de), äußerst (de), krass (de) (slang)
- Gothic: 𐌰𐌱𐍂𐌰𐌱𐌰 (abraba)
- Greek: άκρως (el) (ákros)
- Hungarian: rendkívül (hu)
- Ido: extreme (io)
- Ingrian: erittee
- Irish: cumasach
- Italian: estremamente (it)
- Japanese: 極端に (ja) (きょくたんに, kyokutan ni), 随分 (ja) (ずいぶん, zuibun), 非常に (ja) (ひじょうに, hijō ni)
- Karakhanid: اَيِغْ (ayïɣ)
- Latin: perquam
- Maori: hītararī
- Marathi: अत्यंत (mr) (atyanta)
- Navajo: tʼáá íiyisíí, tʼóó báhádzigo
- Old Turkic: 𐰪𐰃𐰍 (ańïɣ)
- Polish: niezwykle (pl)
- Portuguese: extremamente (pt)
- Romanian: în mod extrem
- Russian: чрезвыча́йно (ru) (črezvyčájno), кра́йне (ru) (krájne), экстрема́льно (ru) (ekstremálʹno)
- Spanish: extremadamente (es), sumamente (es), harto (es)
- Swedish: extremt (sv)
- Tocharian B: tanki
- Ukrainian: вкрай (vkraj)
- Vietnamese: vô cùng (vi), tột bậc (vi), tột bực, tột cùng (vi), hết sức (vi), cực độ
- Volapük: mu (vo)
- Walloon: carapmint (wa), teribmint (wa)
|