spectacularly

English

Etymology

From spectacular +‎ -ly.

Pronunciation

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Adverb

spectacularly (comparative more spectacularly, superlative most spectacularly)

  1. In a spectacular manner, extraordinarily, amazingly.
    • 1992 August 30, Martin Amis, “What He Learned in Bed”, in The New York Times[1]:
      This argument turns out to be spectacularly mistaken. When fiction works, the individual and the universal are frictionlessly combined.
    • 2023 August 9, Nigel Harris, “Comment: Disinterested and dishonest”, in RAIL, number 989, page 3:
      Obsessed only with cost, 'Sir Humphrey' saw that Transport for London 'got away' with ticket office closures on the Tube with only minor public pushback and miscalculated that it could do the same on the national network. This assumption backfired spectacularly.

Translations