highly

Primary: adverbCan function as: adverb

Fixed as adverb, derived from adjective 'high'
high frequency – among top 2000 wordsGeneralAcademicBusinessFormal writing

πŸ”Š Pronunciation

/ˈhaΙͺli/
Syllables: high-ly
Stress: PRIMARY-secondary
First syllable stressed, common pronunciation across varieties

πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§β€πŸ‘¦ Word Family

Word Class Forms
Verbs heighten
Nouns height, highness
Adjectives high, higher, highest
Adverbs highly
Forms regular comparative/superlative patterns

🎨 Adjective Forms

Base: high
Comparative: higher
Superlative: highest
Gradability: gradable
Position: both
Can be used with: very, extremely, quite

Derived Forms

With prefixes: ultrahigh (ultra-), superhigh (super-)
With suffixes: highly (-ly), highness (-ness)

πŸƒ Adverb Forms

From Adjectives

highly: to a great degree or extent; very much (positions: degree, manner)

“She is highly qualified for the position”
“This issue is highly controversial”
“The project was highly successful”
Irregular forms: none
Comparative: more highly
Superlative: most highly

πŸ“– Meanings & Definitions

Adjective Meanings

1

of great vertical extent or physical elevation
“a high building”
“high mountains”
Synonyms: tall, elevated, lofty
Antonyms: low, short

neutral

2

great in amount, value, or degree
“high prices”
“high quality”
Synonyms: expensive, considerable, substantial
Antonyms: low, minimal

neutral

🀝 Collocations

⚠️ Common Errors

❌ He is high qualifiedβ†’βœ“ He is highly qualified
Confusion between adjective and adverb form
Common for: Languages without adverbial suffixes

Medium impact

❌ very highlyβ†’βœ“ highly
'Highly' already means 'very' or 'to a great extent'
❌ She speaks highly Englishβ†’βœ“ She speaks English well
'Highly' not used for basic abilities

🌍 Etymology

Origin: Old English 'heahlice', from 'heah' (high) + '-lice' (-ly)
Original meaning: “in a high manner, to a high degree”
Development: Maintained consistent meaning while becoming more formal

πŸ“Š Register & Frequency

Frequency: top 2000 words
Spoken: neutral
Written: common
Academic: very common
Business: very common
Formality: formal

πŸ”— Semantic Relations

Synonyms

Exact: greatly, very much
Near: extremely, considerably, substantially
Contextual: well, greatly

Antonyms

Gradable: slightly, barely, hardly