extraordinary
adjective /ɪkˈstrɔːdnri/
/ɪkˈstrɔːrdəneri/
- What an extraordinary thing to say!
- The president took the extraordinary step of apologizing publicly for his behaviour!
- We are a normal family dealing with extraordinary circumstances.
- it is extraordinary that… It's extraordinary that he managed to sleep through the party.
- it is extraordinary how… It is extraordinary how little evidence supports this view.
Extra Examples- What makes it so extraordinary is that the experts had all dismissed her theories as nonsense.
- The discussion was about the treatment of extraordinary items in the company accounts.
- It seems extraordinary that she could have got away with this for so long.
- I find it extraordinary that anybody on a murder charge should be given bail.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs- appear
- be
- feel
- …
- most
- really
- truly
- …
- an extraordinary achievement
- She was a truly extraordinary woman.
- They went to extraordinary lengths to explain their behaviour.
- The film tells the extraordinary story of two people struggling to survive in the Arctic.
- The response from the public has been quite extraordinary.
Extra Examples- The portrait does not do justice to her extraordinary beauty.
- The festival offers an extraordinary range of artistic events.
- She must have been an extraordinary artist to work with.
- I found an extraordinary number of errors in the document.
- He did the work with extraordinary energy and good humour.
- He used the extraordinary powers granted to him by Parliament to introduce economic reforms.
- [only before noun] (formal) (of a meeting, etc.) arranged for a special purpose and happening in addition to what normally or regularly happens
- An extraordinary meeting was held to discuss the problem.
- The ruling Socialist Party held an extraordinary congress in July, two months before the annual congress.
- (following nouns) (specialist) (of an official) employed for a special purpose in addition to the usual staff
- an envoy extraordinary
Word Originlate Middle English: from Latin extraordinarius, from extra ordinem ‘outside the normal course of events’.