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View synonyms for drastically

drastically

[ dras-tik-lee ]

adverb

  1. so as to have a thorough or far-reaching effect; profoundly or radically:

    Our everyday lives have been drastically altered by the huge number of innovations in medicine, transportation, communications, and more.

  2. extremely:

    This school should be merged with others in the same locality, as the number of students studying here is drastically low.



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Word History and Origins

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Example Sentences

Just when the Putins left the Soviet Union, that country began to change drastically and irrevocably.

And how investor confidence would fall drastically each time Rousseff rose in the polls.

Like Broadway, the landscape of reality TV has been changing drastically and rapidly in recent years.

Journalists are leaving Kabul, embassies are downsizing, and donors are quietly and drastically scaling back.

Similarly, the results of this study should not drastically increase your intake of Indian food.

One of the first items drastically reduced in the local and state budgets was school expenditures.

Your freedom of movement and of communication must remain drastically restricted until this five-year period is over.

And physically, the human race altered just as drastically in an equally short span of time.

No one surely existed more fitted to deal drastically with a scoundrel than he.

By noon one of the battalions of a division had received and dealt drastically with three counterattacks.

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