adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
unusually/exceptionally cold
▪ a period of unusually cold weather
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
cold
▪ An unusually cold winter in 1916/17 brought the city of Paris almost to a halt.
▪ So far, northern and central areas, gripped by unusually cold weather since autumn, have been worst hit.
▪ The players had to contend with unusually cold conditions, including the first snowfall in the area for more than 50 years.
▪ This may, however, be linked with the unusually cold winter.
good
▪ The weather in Moscow was unusually good, not too hot and not too cold.
▪ If governments really want to shatter the world economy, January 1991 would be an unusually good time to start.
▪ The museum also runs a booking service for West End shows and has an unusually good selection of cards and posters.
▪ The sun was shining, and an early morning trip to the pier had produced some unusually good mackerel.
heavy
▪ For many experts, the unusually heavy and dense lava may continue to be churned out of Etna for a further year.
▪ Volume in both the call options and Loral stock was unusually heavy last Thursday and Friday.
▪ He also had unusually heavy, drooping eyelids which could make him look comic or sinister, benevolent or supercilious.
▪ In Towacho, where unusually heavy snow fell recently, Towa High School was the venue for the course.
▪ His large eyes might have been girlish had it not been for his unusually heavy eyebrows.
high
▪ Chang felt that the surface, which offered an unusually high bounce for an indoor court, suited a baseliner like himself.
▪ On that day tension was unusually high due to recent frequent threats, obscenities, and shoving matches.
▪ And Arsenal were offering an unusually high salary for a football manager - £2,000.
▪ The percentage is unusually high for so late in the campaign.
▪ Early returns were showing an unusually high catch average of 5.75 fish per rod.
▪ Florida listed an unusually high 10 presidential tickets, which contributed to confusing ballot designs in some counties.
▪ It does make sense that the lateral line would be adversely affected by prolonged exposure to unusually high voltage.
▪ Last Thursday and Friday, options that could be exercised in January and February were being bought in unusually high volume.
hot
▪ The day was unusually hot for late April and a still, almost oppressive air hung over the forest.
▪ He had come into the unusually hot and sticky summer town like a Zephyr, Valerie thought.
large
▪ These pictures, often on unusually large negatives for the period, constitute Fenton's greatest contribution to photography.
▪ The coffee to which Wynn was invited included an unusually large group of senior White House and party officials.
▪ His wardrobe was also unusually large and varied.
▪ And that was a peculiar job from that point of view, because it included an unusually large number of fifty-dollar bills.
▪ These energetic measures produced unusually large sums.
▪ Comet forecasting is notoriously risky, but some daredevils say the unusually large Hale-Bopp could be the brightest of the century.
▪ This unique and unusually large number of disposals has disturbed the market in public houses.
▪ Their egg is an unusually large one for their body size and has a generous yolk.
long
▪ It has the rather unusually long period of 547 days.
▪ Many of its 3, 000 rank-and-file workers also exercised options as an unusually long quiet period ended.
▪ He may also appear in the guise of a small grey water-horse or a lamb, always with an unusually long tail.
▪ Some flies had unusually short sleep patterns; others were unusually long.
▪ Watching him refill her glass, she noticed he had unusually long fingernails for a man.
▪ The unusually long incubation period for this disease dictates an unusually long trial period.
low
▪ A thief wants to sell quickly and can offer an unusually low price.
▪ Those suffering from frequent or daily headaches typically have an unusually low magnesium level.
▪ The situation is exacerbated by unusually low levels of nitrogen oxides, which inhibit ozone destruction.
▪ Longer periods of unusually low phenylalanine concentrations were also independently associated with worse outcome.
▪ It is the Somerset juveniles that show an unusually low level.
▪ They said the trend was an unusually low blip and it was possible that crime rates would continue to rise in 1992.
▪ The National Rivers Authority says rainfall levels have been unusually low.
quiet
▪ Fortunately it was an unusually quiet day at the surgery.
▪ Nevertheless, we had all noticed that for the past week Loi had been unusually quiet.
▪ With stocks racing ahead and the Dow and Nasdaq in record territory day after day, our office phones are unusually quiet.
▪ But today the square was unusually quiet.
▪ It was an unusually quiet feud, and, given Bradman's stature, one that O'Reilly could never win.
▪ The others in the room were unusually quiet.
▪ Mickeen Gavan, the porter, had been unusually quiet, his eyes evasive.
small
▪ Everything in the cottage was unusually small and clean.
strong
▪ Manx law gives unusually strong protection against litigators.
▪ Of course there is an unusually strong element of corrigibility in this particular story.
▪ The unusually strong words follow a meeting of the Joint Liason Group in London late last month.
▪ Some believe that it is because of unusually strong cold ocean currents, which improve the chances of penguins surviving the journey.
warm
▪ Another golfing society with an unusually warm connection with the Club is the curiously named Worple Society.
▪ It means that unusually warm conditions can lead to too many male alligators and too few females.
▪ Unless a freak freeze is experienced, an unusually warm late winter-early springtime will have Augusta National in lush heavily-grassed condition.
▪ They sat in the sitting room, now unusually warm but still filled with traces of Mrs Redburn, and drank coffee.
wide
▪ Through these Departments the Faculty offers an unusually wide range of courses and options.
▪ The Faculty embraces an unusually wide range of departments.
▪ In this way he acquired an unusually wide experience of railway engineering and management under difficult conditions.
▪ If it is unusually wide, it is almost certainly a highly venomous form.
▪ He had a gift for the unexpected word and an unusually wide range of knowledge.
■ VERB
become
▪ Everyday language is made strange in poetry, and in particular the physical sounds of words themselves become unusually prominent.
▪ With a violent crash they both fell through the doorway, and a moment later became unusually silent.
▪ I look around and notice that the rehearsal room is becoming unusually crowded.
▪ The effect of this intense focus on modes of address is that personal pronouns become unusually prominent.
look
▪ Jamie was looking unusually downcast and Tina gave the impression that she was angry with her grandfather.
▪ Ledeen noticed that the official was looking unusually tanned; perhaps he had been skiing?
▪ On meeting him again, I at once noticed that he was looking unusually well and bronzed.
seem
▪ The West Country woollen districts seem unusually well documented on these matters, but there is evidence from other trades.
▪ At breakfast that morning, Bella seemed unusually self-absorbed.
▪ But this particular campaign seems unusually mischievous.
▪ It seemed unusually dark inside, and then I remembered that I had been walking into the sun before I came in.
▪ Hayling had seemed unusually pleased to see him and offered him some champagne.
▪ And then he was cruising down the smooth black asphalt road, which seemed unusually sunny.
▪ We do not know how many mares have a second hybrid foal, but even so this figure seems unusually high.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Are unusually expensive parts of the budget itemized and justified?
▪ In 1686 Mathey began building unusually far back from the road.
▪ It was the defendant, an unusually ignorant peasant, who was in awe of the courtroom.
▪ It was true that she was unusually competent; she made her mark in whatever she did.
▪ Nevertheless, we had all noticed that for the past week Loi had been unusually quiet.
▪ On this occasion he said unusually little.
▪ The percentage is unusually high for so late in the campaign.