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Really vs Livingly - What's the difference?

really | livingly |

As adverbs the difference between really and livingly

is that really is (lb) actually; in fact; in reality while livingly is in actual living experience, vitally, really.

As an interjection really

is indicating surprise at, or requesting confirmation of, some new information; to express skepticism.

really

English

Adverb

(en adverb)
  • (lb) Actually; in fact; in reality.
  • :
  • Very (modifying an adjective); very much (modifying a verb).
  • :
  • *, chapter=10
  • , title= The Mirror and the Lamp , passage=It was a joy to snatch some brief respite, and find himself in the rectory drawing–room. Listening here was as pleasant as talking; just to watch was pleasant. The young priests who lived here wore cassocks and birettas; their faces were fine and mild, yet really strong, like the rector's face; and in their intercourse with him and his wife they seemed to be brothers.}}
  • *
  • *:There was also hairdressing: hairdressing, too, really was hairdressing in those times — no running a comb through it and that was that. It was curled, frizzed, waved, put in curlers overnight, waved with hot tongs;.
  • Usage notes

    * Like its synonyms, really is, in practice, often used to preface an opinion, rather than a fact. (See also usage notes for .) : Increasingly people are recognising what's really important is having children. '>citation

    Synonyms

    * (actually) actually, in fact, indeed, truly * (sense) so

    Statistics

    *

    Interjection

    (en interjection)
  • Indicating surprise at, or requesting confirmation of, some new information; to express skepticism.
  • A: He won the Nobel Prize yesterday.
    B: Really?
  • Indicating that what was just said was obvious and unnecessary; contrived incredulity
  • A: I've just been reading Shakespeare - he's one of the best authors like, ever!
    B: Really .
  • (colloquial, chiefly, US) Indicating affirmation, agreement.
  • A: That girl talks about herself way too much.
    B: Really . She's a nightmare.
  • Indicating displeasure at another person's behaviour or statement.
  • Well, really ! How rude.

    Synonyms

    * you don't say, no kidding, oh really, no really

    References

    livingly

    English

    Adverb

    (en adverb)
  • In actual living experience, vitally, really.
  • * 1851 , , Moby Dick , ch. 103—Measurement of The Whale's Skeleton:
  • Only in the heart of quickest perils; only when within the eddyings of his angry flukes; only on the profound unbounded sea, can the fully invested whale be truly and livingly found out.
  • * 1887 , , "Literature for Children" in Confessions and Criticisms :
  • If we believed—if the great mass of people known as the civilized world did actually and livingly believe—that there was really anything beyond or above the physical order of nature, our children's literature, wrongly so called, would not be what it is.
  • * 1922 , , Fantasia of the Unconscious , ch. 14:
  • A man very rarely has an image of a person with whom he is livingly , vitally connected.
  • Realistically; as if experienced in life or as if alive.
  • * 1882 , , "North Devon" in Prose Idylls, New and Old'' (originally published in ''Fraser's Magazine , July, 1849):
  • It was so strange, to have that gay Italian bay, with all its memories . . . and those great old heroes, with their awful deeds for good and evil, all brought so suddenly and livingly before me.
  • * , "How To Make the Best of Life" in Essays on Life, Art and Science :
  • Take an extreme case. A group of people are photographed by Edison's new process—say Titiens, Trebelli, and Jenny Lind, with any two of the finest men singers the age has known—let them be photographed incessantly for half an hour while they perform a scene in "Lohengrin"; let all be done stereoscopically. Let them be phonographed at the same time so that their minutest shades of intonation are preserved, let the slides be coloured by a competent artist, and then let the scene be called suddenly into sight and sound, say a hundred years hence. Are those people dead or alive? Dead to themselves they are, but while they live so powerfully and so livingly in us, which is the greater paradox—to say that they are alive or that they are dead?
  • * 1892 , , Across The Plains , ch. 9:
  • You should have heard him speak of what he loved. . . . Here was a piece of experience solidly and livingly built up in words, here was a story created.

    References

    * Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed. (1989) *