remarkably
remarkably — 副詞
1. used to say that something is so surprising, unusual, or impressive that it draw
驚人地
以出乎意料、引人注意的方式
used to say that something is so surprising, unusual, or impressive that it draws people's attention — for example, a remarkably cheap flight, or a remarkably honest answer during an interview.
Takeshi did a remarkably good job on the history project despite having very little time.
Takeshi 在時間非常有限的情況下,把歷史報告做得極為出色。
remarkably + adjective (good)
Remarkably, the small fishing boat crossed the entire ocean with no help from modern equipment.
令人驚訝的是,那艘小漁船在沒有任何現代設備的幫助下橫越了整片大海。
sentence adverb at start of clause
Camila played the violin remarkably well for someone who only started lessons last year.
Camila 去年才開始學小提琴,卻拉得出奇地好。
The two houses on Elm Street were remarkably similar even though different builders made them.
Elm 街上的那兩棟房子雖然由不同的建商建造,卻驚人地相似。
Nadia learned to speak Japanese remarkably quickly during her year in Tokyo.
Nadia 在東京待了一年,日語就學得出奇地快。
- astonishingly
stronger emphasis; implies greater surprise or disbelief
- amazingly
similar in meaning, slightly more informal and conversational
- strikingly
focuses on how easily something is noticed, often about appearance or contrast
- extraordinarily
emphasizes that something is far beyond the usual level
- unremarkably
direct opposite; in a way that is ordinary and not worth noticing
- ordinarily
suggests something is typical or average, not surprising at all
文法句型
remarkably + adjective
remarkably + adverb
Remarkably, [clause]
用法筆記
Most often placed directly before an adjective or another adverb that it intensifies. Can also be used at the start of a sentence to comment on a whole situation, followed by a comma.