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fully
[ fool-ee, fool-lee ]
adverb
- entirely or wholly:
You should be fully done with the work by now.
- quite or at least:
Fully half the class attended the ceremony.
fully
/ ˈ´ÚÊŠ±ôɪ /
adverb
- to the greatest degree or extent; totally; entirely
- amply; sufficiently; adequately
they were fully fed
- at least
it was fully an hour before she came
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ±ç³Ü²¹î€È´¾±-´Ú³Ü±ôl²â adverb
- ³Ü²Ô·´Ú³Ü±ôl²â adverb
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Example Sentences
He adds: "Val, among his peers, was well loved. He came fully loaded."
It’s a testament to Shannon’s direction that he fully commits to submerging us into Janice’s unimaginable emotional stupor, even when that gutsy approach ultimately proves to be the film’s undoing.
All of their songs, whether fully realized or half-baked, were dutifully logged by McCartney into an exercise book he had swiped from school.
"Senedd ministers must commission an urgent engineering review of this stretch of road to fully assess the risks and identify what measures can be taken to avoid more lives being lost," he said.
They might even give Liverpool another big scare here but, with what is at stake, I still think the leaders will be fully focused and get the job done again, like they did against Everton.
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