literally

pronunciation

How to pronounce literally in British English: UK [ˈlɪtərəli]word uk audio image

How to pronounce literally in American English: US [ˈlɪtərəli] word us audio image

  • Adverb:
    in a literal sense
    (intensifier before a figurative expression) without exaggeration

Word Origin

literally (adv.)
1530s, "in a literal sense," from literal + -ly (2). Erroneously used in reference to metaphors, hyperbole, etc., even by writers like Dryden and Pope, to indicate "what follows must be taken in the strongest admissible sense" (1680s), which is opposite to the word's real meaning and a long step down the path to the modern misuse of it. We have come to such a pass with this emphasizer that where the truth would require us to insert with a strong expression 'not literally, of course, but in a manner of speaking', we do not hesitate to insert the very word we ought to be at pains to repudiate; ... such false coin makes honest traffic in words impossible. [Fowler, 1924]

Antonym

Example

1. For it is , literally , a space hopper .
2. Because we 're literally fat from the sugars in carbohydrates through excessive grain consumption .
3. If you don 't know which way is which , you literally can 't get past hello .
4. But now this place is literally dying out .
5. But it literally took an historic feat of olympic proportions for him to earn that status .

more: >How to Use "literally" with Example Sentences