Idiom
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)
With a big time twist.
We're not going to start [Season 2] with a big time jump.
Similar(56)
Working hard to be authentic, even if it puts him at odds with his image as a big time CMO from time to time.
Jesse Eisenberg plays a boychick from New York who tries his luck in L.A. too, working with his uncle Phil, a big time agent played by Steve Carell.
While Stoner has been able to manage an active travel schedule, most retirees admit that playing portfolio manager with your nest egg is a big time commitment.
A big time upgrade with a focus on the camera, co-founder and CEO Kevin Systrom expected signups to pick up some significant steam.
Treats are a big time hit with dogs - don't hesitate!
We think it is because the selecting process in RSBLQ gets the stable routing paths with a bigger time tolerance, so it can make full use of the network cache; as V-NDN applies a complete flooding way, which would have a bad impact on the network performance, this may be the reason for its worse result.
All in all, it was a typical late-night interview with a big-time politician.
We spent the first night in Marfa, an equally small town with a big-time art scene.
While it typically takes 10 years to "cook a singer," Ms. Bers said, "Isabel entered with a big-time career right out of school, and that's unusual.
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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