unbelievably
English
Etymology
unbelievable + -ly
Adverb
unbelievably (comparative more unbelievably, superlative most unbelievably)
- (manner) In a manner that one does not believe.
- He gestured unbelievably. Everyone knew he was faking being sick.
- (degree) To an extent not to be believed.
- His face turned unbelievably blue. We realized he was actually choking.
- (evaluative) Contrary to expectations, amazingly.
- Unbelievably, Rudy saved the man's life but got sued for breaking two of his ribs.
Translations
- Arabic:
- Armenian:
- Catalan:
- Chinese:
- Mandarin:
- Dutch:
- Finnish:
- French:
- German:
- Greek:
- Hindi:
- Italian:
- Japanese:
- Korean:
- Portuguese:
- Russian:
- Spanish:
- Vietnamese:
- Arabic:
- Armenian:
- Catalan:
- Chinese:
- Mandarin:
- Dutch:
- Finnish:
- French: , ,
- German:
- Greek:
- Hindi:
- Italian:
- Japanese:
- Korean:
- Portuguese:
- Russian:
- Spanish:
- Vietnamese:
- Arabic:
- Armenian: ,
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: ,
- Dutch: ,
- Finnish:
- French:
- German:
- Greek: ,
- Hindi:
- Italian:
- Japanese:
- Korean:
- Portuguese:
- Russian:
- Spanish:
- Vietnamese:
- Esperanto:
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.