arguably
arguably — adverb
1. in a way that you could give good reasons for, even if other people might disagr
in a way that you could give good reasons for, even if other people might disagree — typically placed just before a strong claim, especially one using 'best', 'greatest', or 'more ... than'.
Lionel Messi is arguably the greatest footballer of his generation.
arguably + superlative adjective
Tokyo's subway is arguably more efficient than any other system in the world.
arguably + comparative adjective
Professor Lin's new book is arguably her most important work to date.
The chocolate cake at Ming's bakery is arguably the best in the city.
The committee argued that schools, arguably, should teach cooking and basic money management alongside core subjects.
- possibly
weaker — admits a chance, no built-in claim of having reasons
- conceivably
more abstract; suggests an idea is imaginable, not necessarily defensible
- debatably
near-synonym, but puts more weight on the disagreement than on your reasons
- indisputably
claims no reasonable person would disagree
- undeniably
treats the point as obvious and beyond argument
文法句型
arguably + comparative/superlative adjective
arguably + clause
用法筆記
Almost always pairs with a strong claim, especially a comparative (more/less) or superlative (best/worst/most). The speaker signals that they have reasons ready, while admitting the point is open to debate.