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Big time.
This can be used to with the meaning 'very much'- if you like something big time, you like it a lot.
Exact(2)
"A couple of weeks ago, I showed up on a rig and I got out of my truck and looked at the roughnecks that were there and they were fucked up — I mean big time, just going jammin', crammin'," he said.
I mean big time.
Similar(56)
"Almost immediately after becoming C.E.O., an industry that was positioning itself for a recovery actually went into a funk, completely -- I mean, big-time".
Does this mean big-time CEOs get to be treated differently from the guy who runs the local restaurant, who folks know is gay?
But I mean anything big time you know, I wouldn't ask anybody in the pub or [anything] like that.
For either, this means the big time.
That means funding big, time-consuming investigative projects will continue to be a problem.
Mr. Clarke prides himself on honesty and says he does not let bidders and consigners inflate prices artificially, even if it would mean bigger one-time sales.
School officials said the hiring did not mean Coast Guard would "go big time"; the Division III school played a relatively short schedule at the time against smaller schools in New England.
Many ordinary telecommuters think that being home means they can multitask big time, like take care of a baby while writing a legal brief.
Sparkly and smiley and thoroughly goofy (sleepy and dopey make appearances too), the story turns on an Iowan refugee for whom the Big Time means doing the hoochie-coochie in a Los Angeles club.
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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