"unusually" in inglés with examples - Collocation dictionary inglés

unusually adverbio

verbo + unusually
Kolokacji: 4
unusually crowded • unusually shaped • unusually united • unusually subdue
unusually + adjetivo
Kolokacji: 189
unusually high • unusually large • unusually long • unusually strong • unusually low • unusually heavy • unusually warm • ...
collocations grouped by meanings
Grup znaczeniowych: 50
(1) high, tall, rich, deep
Kolokacji: 4
(2) large, prominent, talkative
Kolokacji: 3
(6) heavy, slow, thick, dense
Kolokacji: 4
(8) good, adept, skillful
Kolokacji: 3
(9) quiet, calm
Kolokacji: 2
(12) cold, cool, tired
Kolokacji: 3
(13) short, brusque
Kolokacji: 2
(23) early, young, late
Kolokacji: 3
(24) silent, public, explicit
Kolokacji: 3
(25) detailed, cautious
Kolokacji: 2
(26) generous, sympathetic
Kolokacji: 2
(27) active, busy, interested
Kolokacji: 3
(28) dry, wet, empty, rainy
Kolokacji: 4
(30) dark, grim, somber, sober
Kolokacji: 4
(32) vivid, interesting, realistic
Kolokacji: 3
(33) shaped, personal
Kolokacji: 2
(34) thin, narrow, flat
Kolokacji: 3
(35) weak, pale
Kolokacji: 2
(37) steep, bold
Kolokacji: 2
(38) talented, gifted
Kolokacji: 2
(40) sophisticated, perceptive
Kolokacji: 2
(41) stable, volatile, coherent
Kolokacji: 3
(42) conciliatory, flexible
Kolokacji: 2
(45) nervous, anxious
Kolokacji: 2
(46) stern, persistent, frequent
Kolokacji: 3
(48) upbeat, cheerful, optimistic
Kolokacji: 3
(49) resistant, tolerant
Kolokacji: 2
1. unusually resistant = wyjątkowo oporny unusually resistant
2. unusually tolerant = wyjątkowo tolerancyjny unusually tolerant
  • Although his parents were Protestant, he first attended the Catholic school of the Christian Brothers in Vitry which was unusually tolerant given the religious tensions in France at the time.
  • George III of Britain was unusually tolerant of duels, even "providing would-be duelists with a 'pardon,' which they would carry in their pockets to the dueling ground," Mr. Cohen notes.
  • The producer of "The Untouchables" has said that audiences seem to be unusually tolerant of this film's violence, perhaps because they care so much for the characters that the bloodshed never seems exploitative.
  • As Maugham's sexual appetites were then officially disapproved of, or criminal, in nearly all of the countries in which he traveled, the author was unusually tolerant of the vices of others.
  • Aren't Danes supposed to be unusually tolerant and respectful of others?
  • Either he was an unusually tolerant master or someone in the Station had dropped a discreet word, but he made no more comment than to request the lift at the mark of five minutes.
  • L. tripunctata is unusually tolerant of creosote, a preservative often used to protect timber piles, due to symbiosis with creosote-degrading bacteria.
  • Because the sailors tended to be unusually tolerant, "that might have carried over to their wives," he said.
  • The Fatimids were unusually tolerant of people with different ethnic origins and religious views, and were adept at exploiting their abilities.
(50) timid, reticent
Kolokacji: 2

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