acutely
1acutely — acutely; sub·acutely; …
2Acutely — A*cute ly, adv. In an acute manner; sharply; keenly; with nice discrimination. [1913 Webster] …
3acutely — adverb 1. in an acute manner (Freq. 4) she pitied her sister acutely acutely aware • Derived from adjective: ↑acute 2. having a rapid onset (Freq. 1) an acutely debilitating virus …
4acutely — [[t]əkju͟ːtli[/t]] 1) ADV GRADED: ADV adj, ADV with v If you feel or notice something acutely, you feel or notice it very strongly. He was acutely aware of the odour of cooking oil... Those tensions have been felt most acutely by women. Syn:… …
5acutely — a|cute|ly [əˈkju:tli] adv feeling or noticing something very strongly acutely aware/conscious (of/that) ▪ Students are becoming acutely aware that they need more than just paper qualifications. ▪ acutely embarrassed …
6acutely — a|cute|ly [ ə kjutli ] adverb used for emphasizing that a feeling, often an unpleasant one, is very strong: memories that were acutely painful acutely aware: He was acutely aware of his public image …
7acutely — adverb very strongly or painfully: acutely embarrassed | acutely aware/conscious: The president is acutely conscious of the need for more doctors and nurses …
8acutely — UK [əˈkjuːtlɪ] / US [əˈkjutlɪ] adverb used for emphasizing that a feeling, often an unpleasant one, is very strong memories that were acutely painful acutely aware: He was acutely aware of his public image …
9acutely — adv. Acutely is used with these adjectives: ↑aware, ↑conscious, ↑embarrassed, ↑embarrassing, ↑ill, ↑inflamed, ↑observant, ↑painful, ↑self conscious, ↑sensitive, ↑uncomfortable, ↑ …
10acutely — adverb our trust in you has become acutely shaken Syn: extremely, exceedingly, very, markedly, severely, intensely, deeply, profoundly, keenly, painfully, desperately, tremendously, enormously, thoroughly, heartily; informal awfully, terribly;… …