entirely

IPA: ɪntˈaɪɝɫi

adverb

  • To the full or entire extent.
  • To the exclusion of others.
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Examples of "entirely" in Sentences

  • The article is entirely fraudulent.
  • It's entirely unobserved and unknown.
  • The action was entirely unintentional.
  • I am here entirely -- _entirely_ of my own accord.
  • But perhaps that was entirely and completely jocular
  • The pipits range from entirely sedentary to entirely migratory.
  • Artless Nonculture is completely non profit, and entirely web based.
  • "Then maybe we should drop the term entirely," Gail said, "and just stick with duty."
  • Stylist Annabel Tollman remarked that she hates the term entirely and model Maggie Rizer said she "thinks the industry is probably over-compensating a bit."
  • In their wisdom and I use the word entirely without irony the members of the Cannes jury awarded this year's Palme d'Or to Terrence Malick's majestic and long-awaited film
  • While not rejecting the term entirely, I can sympathise with a weariness about the frequency with which the words ‘loophole’ and ‘technicality’ are used to dismiss important rules of law.
  • Tyson disputed the finding, but rather than scrap the label entirely, it worked with the department to devise a new label -- Chicken Raised Without Antibiotics that impact antibiotic resistance in humans -- that was unveiled in December.
  • He admits also that Socialists and revolutionary unionists are inspired with an entirely new attitude towards society and government and indorses as _entirely sound_ certain expressions from Haywood and Bohn's pamphlet which had been violently attacked by reformist Socialists and conservative unionists.
  • This is, I suppose, a view of the purpose of art that would most readily be called "moral," and I would not repudiate the term entirely, but I think that "existential" would be a far better term, for "moral" carries with it the suggestion of some rigid prescription, of a limited and coercive point of view, which is not the way great literature works.
  • Co., they entirely eliminate the whole bunch from any part or lot in the issue on which they have essayed to speak with such authority, but whose main point, whose essential elements they have _entirely misunderstood_, and hence have treated in a way that is wholly at variance with the truth in the premises, and it is the truth that we are looking for.

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synonyms for entirely
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