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Fully   /fˈʊli/   Listen
Fully

adverb
1.
To the greatest degree or extent; completely or entirely; ('full' in this sense is used as a combining form).  Synonyms: full, to the full.  "He didn't fully understand" , "Knew full well" , "Full-grown" , "Full-fledged"
2.
Sufficiently; more than adequately.  Synonym: amply.  "They were fully (or amply) fed"  Antonym: meagerly.
3.
Referring to a quantity.  Synonym: in full.



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"Fully" Quotes from Famous Books



... teachings in Dr. Long's book more fully because I have, for nearly a quarter of a century, been holding similar views, and dispensing similar, though perhaps less explicit, information. I know from long observation that the teaching is wholesome and necessary, and that the results are universally uplifting. Such teachings improve ...
— Sane Sex Life and Sane Sex Living • H.W. Long

... but very wild and uncouth; much given to "steeks," or strikes; and distinguished, in their hours of leisure and on pay-nights, for their love of cock-fighting, dog-fighting, hard drinking, and cuddy races. The pay-night was a fortnightly saturnalia, in which the pitman's character was fully brought out, especially when the "yel" was good. Though earning much higher wages than the ordinary labouring population of the upper soil, the latter did not mix nor intermarry with them; so that they were left to form their ...
— Lives of the Engineers - The Locomotive. George and Robert Stephenson • Samuel Smiles

... quarterdeck, backed by the great 12-inch guns, this splendid body of colonial troops were drawn up in serried ranks, fully equipped, and receiving their last instructions from their officers who, six months ago, like their men, were leading a peaceful civilian life in Australia and New Zealand 5,000 miles away. Now at ...
— New York Times Current History; The European War, Vol 2, No. 3, June, 1915 - April-September, 1915 • Various

... Veronese shows his admirable taste and discretion; his patrons, the Barbaro family, are his friends, men and women of the world, who put no restraint on his fancy, and are not prone to censure, and Veronese, with the bridle on his neck, so to speak, uses his opportunities fully, yet never exceeds the limits of good taste. He is not gross and sensual like Rubens, but proud, grave and sweet, seductive, but never suggestive or vulgar. After having placed single figures wherever he can find a nook, he assembles all the gods of Olympia at a supper in the ...
— The Venetian School of Painting • Evelyn March Phillipps

... cold-blooded letter-press, and published in the pages of a book. I protest strongly against making a mystery of London infidelity. It has spread and is spreading, I know, and it is well the public should know; but I believe there would be no such antidote to it as for people to be fully made aware how and where it is spreading. That is the role I have all along proposed to myself: not to declaim against any man or any system, not to depreciate or disguise the truth, but simply to describe. ...
— Mystic London: - or, Phases of occult life in the metropolis • Charles Maurice Davies


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