flabbergastingly

English

Etymology

From flabbergasting + -ly.

Adverb

flabbergastingly (comparative more flabbergastingly, superlative most flabbergastingly)

  1. Surprisingly, astonishingly or amazingly
    It was a good date but the food at the restaurant was so flabbergastingly excellent I could barely think of anything else to talk about.
    He had said he would clean his room a thousand times before, but this time he actually did it, and flabbergastingly well too.
    • 1922. George Jean Nathan, Henry Louis Mencken. The smart set: a magazine of cleverness, Volume 69. Ess Ess Pub. Co. page 49.
      (There) must be sympathy in the back parlor if it is to get its message across, and that this flabbergastingly important message... is as follows:...
    • 1971. George Jean Nathan. Materia critica. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. page 115.
      The critical wonderment over the at times curious unevenness of Monckton Hoffe's dramatic writing, over the startlingly good suddenly crossed with the flabbergastingly bad, and vice versa...
    • 2009. Jason McWhorter. Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue: The Untold History of English. Penguin.
      As I write, the flabbergastingly fecund David Crystal has just published another book in the tradition, The Fight for English: How Language Pundits Ate, Shot, and Left.
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