From extreme + -ly.
extremely (comparative more extremely, superlative most extremely)
- (degree) To an extreme degree.
2015 April 14, “America's First All-Girl Quintuplets Born in Texas Hospital”, in Time[1]:The National Center for Health Statistics' latest data indicate that quintuplets are extremely rare, with 66 reported sets of five or more babies in 2013.
to an extreme degree
- Armenian: չափազանց (hy) (čʻapʻazancʻ), սաստիկ (hy) (sastik)
- Bengali: প্রচণ্ড (bn) (proconḍo)
- Bulgarian: кра́йно (bg) (krájno)
- Catalan: extremadament (ca)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 非常 (zh) (fēicháng), 極其/极其 (zh) (jíqí), 極/极 (zh) (jí), 極度/极度 (zh) (jídù), (used after the adjective) 極了/极了 (zh) (jíle)
- Czech: extrémně (cs)
- Dutch: uitermate (nl), extreem (nl)
- Esperanto: treege
- Finnish: äärimmäisen (fi), erittäin (fi)
- French: extrêmement (fr), vachement (fr) (slang)
- Galician: extremadamente
- Georgian: უაღრესად (uaɣresad), უკიდურესად (uḳiduresad)
- German: extrem (de), äußerst (de), krass (de) (slang)
- Gothic: 𐌰𐌱𐍂𐌰𐌱𐌰 (abraba)
- Greek: άκρως (el) (ákros)
- Hungarian: rendkívül (hu)
- Ido: extreme (io)
- Ingrian: erittee
- Irish: cumasach
- Italian: estremamente (it)
- Japanese: 極端に (ja) (きょくたんに, kyokutan ni), 随分 (ja) (ずいぶん, zuibun), 非常に (ja) (ひじょうに, hijō ni)
- Karakhanid: اَيِغْ (ayïɣ)
- Latin: perquam
- Maori: hītararī
- Marathi: अत्यंत (mr) (atyanta)
- Navajo: tʼáá íiyisíí, tʼóó báhádzigo
- Old Turkic: 𐰪𐰃𐰍 (ańïɣ)
- Polish: niezwykle (pl)
- Portuguese: extremamente (pt)
- Romanian: în mod extrem
- Russian: чрезвыча́йно (ru) (črezvyčájno), кра́йне (ru) (krájne), экстрема́льно (ru) (ekstremálʹno)
- Spanish: extremadamente (es), sumamente (es), harto (es)
- Swedish: extremt (sv)
- Tocharian B: tanki
- Ukrainian: вкрай (vkraj)
- Vietnamese: vô cùng (vi), tột bậc (vi), tột bực, tột cùng (vi), hết sức (vi), cực độ
- Volapük: mu (vo)
- Walloon: carapmint (wa), teribmint (wa)
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