literally
01. The players were [literally] dripping wet after the two-hour practice.
02. The [literal] meaning of "starving" is dying of hunger, but people often use it to mean they are very hungry.
03. The views of the city from the top of the mountain are [literally] breath-taking.
04. The runner had to [literally] crawl over the finish line after hurting his foot in the last hundred meters of the marathon.
05. There were [literally] hundreds of thousands of people celebrating in the streets of the city after the World Cup final.
06. They continue to believe in a [literal] Biblical account of creation.
07. Muslims believe the Koran to be the [literal] word of God, as revealed to Muhammad through the Angel Gabriel.
08. It can be difficult to make a [literal] translation of some expressions from other languages because the idea expressed is often specific to the culture.
09. It seems that every new word I learn has a figurative meaning which is often quite different from the [literal] meaning.
10. The culture of Thailand regards the head as the highest part of the body, both [literally] and figuratively.
11. Thomas Edison once said that if we did all the things we were capable of doing, we would [literally] astound ourselves.
12. I read somewhere that the verb "to love" in Persian is "to have a friend." "I love you" translated [literally] is "I have you as a friend," and "I don't like you" simply means "I don't have you as a friend."
13. Mel Brooks once remarked that life [literally] abounds in comedy if you just look around you.
14. Barbara Bush once observed that some people give time, some money, some their skills and connections, some [literally] give their life's blood, but everyone has something to give.
15. The name Indonesians give to their country in their own language [literally] means, "Our Nation of Land and Water."
16. There are [literally] thousands of different kinds of insects living in Papua New Guinea.
17. The islands of the Maldives are so flat, and so close to sea level that the slightest storm could [literally] wash away some of the smaller islands.
18. For many students in Taiwan, their primary goal is to pass the college entrance examination, and their lives are [literally] filled with tests and exams.
19. Maurice Strong recently remarked that what we do in our generation, or what we fail to do, will [literally] determine the fate of the Earth.
Grammatical examples in English. 2013.
Synonyms:
Look at other dictionaries:
literally — Few words have the capacity to cause such mirth: • My grandfather, King George VI, who had literally been catapulted onto the throne Prince Edward as quoted in Private Eye, 1998. There will always be occasions when this type of hilarity is best… … Modern English usage
literally — [lit′ər əl ē] adv. in a literal manner or sense; specif., a) word for word; not imaginatively, figuratively, or freely [to translate a passage literally] b) actually; in fact [the house literally burned to the ground ]: now often used as an… … English World dictionary
Literally — Lit er*al*ly, adv. 1. According to the primary and natural import of words; not figuratively; as, a man and his wife can not be literally one flesh. [1913 Webster] 2. With close adherence to words; word by word. [1913 Webster] So wild and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
literally — index faithfully, verbatim Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
literally — 1530s, in a literal sense, from LITERAL (Cf. literal) + LY (Cf. ly) (2). Erroneously used in reference to metaphors, hyperbole, etc., even by writers like Dryden and Pope, to indicate what follows must be taken in the strongest admissible sense… … Etymology dictionary
literally — [adv] word for word; exactly actually, completely, correctly, direct, directly, faithfully, indisputably, letter by letter*, literatim, not figuratively, plainly, precisely, really, rightly, rigorously, sic*, simply, straight, strictly, to the… … New thesaurus
literally — ► ADVERB 1) in a literal manner or sense. 2) informal used for emphasis (rather than to suggest literal truth) … English terms dictionary
literally — [[t]lɪ̱tərəli[/t]] 1) ADV: ADV with cl/group (not last in cl), ADV before v (emphasis) You can use literally to emphasize an exaggeration. Some careful speakers of English think that this use is incorrect. We ve got to get the economy under… … English dictionary
literally — /lit euhr euh lee/, adv. 1. in the literal or strict sense: What does the word mean literally? 2. in a literal manner; word for word: to translate literally. 3. actually; without exaggeration or inaccuracy: The city was literally destroyed. 4. in … Universalium
literally — All too often used as a kind of disclaimer by writers who mean, literally, the opposite of what they are saying. The result is generally excruciating: Hetzel was literally born with a butchers knife in his mouth (Chicago Tribune); After a slow … Dictionary of troublesome word