extremely
extremely — adverb
1. used before an adjective or adverb to give it a very strong meaning, showing tha
used before an adjective or adverb to give it a very strong meaning, showing that the quality or action described is at a much higher level than usual
The summer in Taipei was extremely hot, often reaching thirty-eight degrees.
collocation: extremely + hot (weather/temperature)
Yumi felt extremely nervous before her first piano recital.
pattern: feel + extremely + adjective (emotion)
The food at the night market was extremely spicy, so Lakan bought a cold drink.
Ilan worked extremely carefully on the model airplane to avoid making mistakes.
It is extremely important to turn off the lights before leaving.
- very
the basic intensifier; weaker in strength and more neutral in register
- incredibly
adds a tone of surprise or disbelief; slightly more informal
- exceptionally
more formal; emphasises that something is unusual or outside the normal range
- immensely
emphasises great scale or degree; slightly more formal
文法句型
extremely + adjective
extremely + adverb
用法筆記
Stronger in intensity than 'very'. Commonly used with gradable adjectives (hot, important, difficult) and adverbs (carefully, quickly, well). Not typically used with superlative forms — for those, use 'by far' instead (e.g. 'by far the best', not 'extremely the best').