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The phrase "enormously about" is not a correct or commonly used phrase in written English.
It does not make sense grammatically and does not convey a clear meaning. It is better to use alternative phrases such as "greatly concerned with" or "focused heavily on" depending on the intended context. Example: The CEO of the company was enormously about the success of the new product launch. This sentence does not make sense as the phrase "enormously about" does not convey a clear meaning. A more appropriate sentence could be: The CEO of the company was greatly concerned with the success of the new product launch.
Exact(9)
It frees me up to care enormously about the things that do offend me.
"He cares enormously about what he does," said Representative Barney Frank, a fellow Democrat from Massachusetts.
But it's clear he cares enormously about his patients – it was a gay patient in distress who sparked the idea for his recent documentary.
This was the thing with Davies: he cared enormously about language, and he was free of the hype and guff that marks almost all of today's coverage.
I care enormously about how I look: women don't want to see men who are overweight, slobbing around in boring, functional clothes.
And the two personality traits that are stopping him from being a great head coach are the same two that make him a great human being: he is loyal to the point of defiance, and he cares enormously about the people around him.
Similar(48)
The government would also benefit enormously, by about £900m annually, if everyone who is presently unconnected used its online services just once a month, Lane Fox noted.
While for the case of using seawater this ratio increases enormously to about 14.4.
Mitt Romney, for all his financial acumen, is enormously clumsy about money, at least, about the rhetoric of money.
In 1775, Sade embarked on a yearlong grand tour of Italy, and wrote an enormous (and enormously tedious) manuscript about the journey entitled "Voyage d'Italie".
"Not only have we not given students opportunities to learn programming, we've also failed to encourage what I'd call computational thinking, which is a way of thinking about and solving problems... it has applications across the curriculum, so it's something pupils would gain enormously from knowing about".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com