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actually

You might think your mom would be thrilled to open a birthday present and find a live rabbit, but actually that's the last thing she's hoping for. Actually is an adverb that means "really."

Actually can be used two ways: first, as an adverb meaning "really." You might say, "It's hard to know which of these cookies will taste best without actually sampling them all." The other way to use the word actually is to imply that your expectations have been proven wrong, that the opposite of what you thought is true. You could say, "The hotel room looked spotless, but actually it turned out to have bedbugs."

PRIMARY MEANINGS OF: actually

1
adv
in actual fact
2
adv
at the present moment
3
adv
as a sentence modifier to add slight emphasis
FULL DEFINITIONS OF: actually
1

adv in actual fact

“to be nominally but not actually independent”
“no one actually saw the shark”
“large meteorites actually come from the asteroid belt”
Synonyms:
really

adv used to imply that one would expect the fact to be the opposite of that stated; surprisingly

“you may actually be doing the right thing by walking out”
“she actually spoke Latin”
Synonyms:
in reality
2

adv at the present moment

“the transmission screen shows the picture that is actually on the air”
3

adv as a sentence modifier to add slight emphasis

actually, we all help clear up after a meal”
actually, I haven't seen the film”
“I'm not all that surprised actually
“she hasn't proved to be too satisfactory, actually
WORD FAMILY
USAGE EXAMPLES