seriously
seriously — adverb
1. to a large or worrying degree, especially when talking about harm, damage, or ne
to a large or worrying degree, especially when talking about harm, damage, or negative situations — for example, being seriously ill, injured, or affected by something bad.
Hoa was seriously injured in the car accident last month.
seriously + passive participle (injured) expressing degree of harm
The storm seriously damaged the roofs of several houses in the village.
seriously + active verb (damaged) for degree of negative impact
The local river became seriously polluted after the factory started dumping waste.
Nicholas was seriously affected by the loss of his job and fell into debt.
文法句型
seriously + adjective (e.g. seriously injured)
seriously + verb (e.g. seriously damaged)
用法筆記
Commonly pairs with past participles of verbs that describe negative outcomes: injured, damaged, affected, polluted, ill. Not used with positive adjectives (do not say 'seriously beautiful').
常見錯誤
2. in a way that shows honest, sincere intention rather than humour or play — also
in a way that shows honest, sincere intention rather than humour or play — also used at the start of a statement to show that the speaker is moving from joking to a more earnest topic.
Imran spoke seriously about the need to protect the environment.
seriously as adverb of manner — how someone speaks
We were laughing a moment ago, but seriously, the deadline is only two days away.
discourse marker: 'Seriously, + statement' shifting tone
Mira looked at the contract seriously before she signed anything.
Élise asked the teacher seriously whether her grades could still improve before finals.
文法句型
seriously + verb (e.g. seriously talk)
Seriously, + clause (discourse marker)
用法筆記
As a sentence adverb (discourse marker), 'Seriously' often begins a sentence and is followed by a comma: 'Seriously, we need to talk.' It signals that the speaker is dropping a light or joking tone and becoming earnest.
3. used in the fixed expression 'take (someone / something) seriously', meaning to
used in the fixed expression 'take (someone / something) seriously', meaning to treat a person, idea, problem, or situation as important, genuine, or dangerous enough to deserve your full attention or respect.
Tamar did not take the warning from the weather service seriously.
negative form: 'not take X seriously' — dismissing something important
The school board finally took the bullying problem seriously after parents complained.
take + (problem) + seriously — treating an issue as important
Zola hoped her boss would take her idea for a new project seriously.
Mateo did not take the strange pain in his chest seriously until it got worse.
- take to heart
idiomatic; implies emotional investment
- pay attention to
less strong; focuses on noticing rather than treating as important
文法句型
take + noun phrase + seriously
用法筆記
This sense only appears in the phrase 'take [object] seriously'. The object can be a person (take him seriously), an idea (take the suggestion seriously), or a situation (take the threat seriously). Rarely used in the progressive aspect ('is taking seriously').
常見錯誤
4. used in informal speech and writing to mean 'very' or 'extremely', adding strong
used in informal speech and writing to mean 'very' or 'extremely', adding strong emphasis — for example, saying a meal was 'seriously good' or a film was 'seriously funny'.
That new Thai restaurant is seriously good — we should go again.
informal intensifier: 'seriously good' = 'very good'
Defne ran seriously fast in the school race and came in first place.
seriously + adverb (fast) for emphasis
Hyun thought the game was seriously boring and stopped playing after ten minutes.
Nia bought a vintage jacket that she said was seriously cool for only fifteen dollars.
文法句型
seriously + adjective (e.g. seriously good)
seriously + adverb (e.g. seriously fast)
用法筆記
Restricted to informal contexts — conversation, social media, casual writing. Not appropriate in academic essays, business reports, or formal letters. Sense 4 usage with positive adjectives ('seriously good', 'seriously funny') is the best test to distinguish it from sense 1, which is restricted to negative outcomes.