radically

Etymology
or

Adverb

 * 1) In a radical manner; fundamentally; very.
 * 2) At the root.
 * 3) * 1788, Jonathan Edwards, in a report to the Connecticut Society of Arts and Sciences:
 * This [Algonquian] language [family] is spoken by all the Indians throughout New England. Every tribe, as that of Stockbridge, that of Farmington, that of New London, &c. has a different dialect [i.e. language], but the language [family] is radically the same.
 * 1) * 1788, Jonathan Edwards, in a report to the Connecticut Society of Arts and Sciences:
 * This [Algonquian] language [family] is spoken by all the Indians throughout New England. Every tribe, as that of Stockbridge, that of Farmington, that of New London, &c. has a different dialect [i.e. language], but the language [family] is radically the same.
 * This [Algonquian] language [family] is spoken by all the Indians throughout New England. Every tribe, as that of Stockbridge, that of Farmington, that of New London, &c. has a different dialect [i.e. language], but the language [family] is radically the same.

Derived terms

 * radically centrist

Translations

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