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Discover Ludwig"extremely ecstatic" is a correct and usable phrase in written English
It means to be in a state of extreme joy or happiness. Example: The crowd erupted in cheers as the team scored the winning goal, leaving the players feeling extremely ecstatic.
Exact(2)
"We're extremely ecstatic, because we've been selling tickets only three months and not two years," he said by telephone this week.
Timothy Coggins' niece, Heather Coggins, told HuffPost her family is "extremely ecstatic" about the arrests.
Similar(57)
"I'm absolutely ecstatic and extremely surprised," Watson, 24, told BBC Sport.
"I was elated, ecstatic and extremely surprised that we were successful", he later said.
It had been ecstatic but not extremely.
Leslie Wong caught and pulled into the wave of the day, his back slightly arched, his arms relaxed, making the extremely difficult — no, come on, the ecstatic — look easy.
"I was ecstatic that it was extremely commercially successful," Fonda said of the film in an interview on a retrospective edition of the DVD, according to a 2007 New York Times report.
In the past, easterners would have been ecstatic to buy such an extremely valuable product "under the table".
Of special importance is the prominence of drawing, or extremely thin painting, like the floral-patterned dress of the ecstatic peasant in "Dance".
Their ecstatic reviews reverberated through Britain, which takes its claret extremely seriously.
I am ecstatic about the amazing four years ahead of me and extremely grateful for the love and support that has gotten me through this whole process.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com