excepţional

excepţional
EXCEPŢIONÁL, -Ă, excepţionali, -e, adj. 1. Care face, care constituie o excepţie, care iese din comun; deosebit. 2. Foarte bun, excelent, extraordinar, remarcabil, grozav (3). ♦ (Adverbial; cu determinări introduse prin prep. "de", formează superlativul) Foarte, extraordinar. [pr.: -ţi-o-] – Din fr. exceptionnel.
Trimis de ionel_bufu, 16.06.2004. Sursa: DEX '98

EXCEPŢIONÁL adj., adv. 1. adj. v. extraordinar. 2. adj. v. perfect. 3. adj. v. neobişnuit. 4. adv. v. foarte. 5. adv. v. sfâşietor.
Trimis de siveco, 13.09.2007. Sursa: Sinonime

excepţionál adj. m. (sil. -ţi-o-), pl. excepţionáli; f. sg. excepţionálă, pl. excepţionále
Trimis de siveco, 10.08.2004. Sursa: Dicţionar ortografic

EXCEPŢIONÁL1 excepţională (excepţionali, excepţionale) 1) Care are caracter de excepţie; care constituie o excepţie. Caz excepţional. 2) Care se impune prin calităţile sale; excelent; unic. Calitate excepţională. Frumuseţe excepţională. [Sil. -ţi-o-] /<fr. exceptionnel
Trimis de siveco, 22.08.2004. Sursa: NODEX

EXCEPŢIONÁL2 adv. 1) Într-un mod care constituie o excepţie; prin excepţie. 2) (urmat de prepoziţia de, precedând adjective sau adverbe) În măsură mare; extraordinar. excepţional de bun. /<fr. exceptionnel
Trimis de siveco, 22.08.2004. Sursa: NODEX

EXCEPŢIONÁL, -Ă adj. 1. Care este, care face, care constituie o excepţie. ♦ Care iese din comun; deosebit. 2. Foarte bun, extraordinar, minunat, excelent. [pron. ecs-cep-ţi-o-, var. escepţional, -ă adj. / cf. fr. exceptionnel].
Trimis de LauraGellner, 19.03.2005. Sursa: DN

EXCEPŢIONÁL, -Ă adj. 1. care este, face, constituie o excepţie. ♢ care iese din comun; deosebit. 2. foarte bun, extraordinar, minunat, excelent. (< fr. exceptionnel)
Trimis de raduborza, 15.09.2007. Sursa: MDN

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  • exceptional — ex‧cep‧tion‧al [ɪkˈsepʆnəl] adjective 1. ACCOUNTING an exceptional cost etc is one that does not occur regularly: • a $34 million exceptional restructuring charge 2. very good, or much better than usual: • The last decade produced exceptional… …   Financial and business terms

  • exceptional — exceptional, exceptionable These adjectives relate to different meanings of exception. Exceptional means ‘unusual, not typical’, i.e. ‘forming an exception’ in a favourable sense: • Schizophrenes are often held to be people of exceptional charm D …   Modern English usage

  • exceptional — exceptional, exceptionable, although not synonyms, are liable to confusion. Something is exceptional which is itself an exception, and so is out of the ordinary, being either extraordinary or unusual {this is an exceptional opportunity} {the bath …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Exceptional — Ex*cep tion*al, a. [Cf. F. exceptionnel.] Forming an exception; not ordinary; uncommon; rare; hence, better than the average; superior. Lyell. [1913 Webster] This particular spot had exceptional advantages. Jowett (Th. ) {Ex*cep tion*al*ly}, adv …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • exceptional — [adj1] irregular aberrant, abnormal, anomalous, atypical, deviant, distinct, extraordinary, inconsistent, infrequent, notable, noteworthy, odd, peculiar, phenomenal, rare, remarkable, scarce, singular, special, strange, uncommon, uncustomary,… …   New thesaurus

  • exceptional — [ek sep′shə nəl, iksep′shə nəl] adj. 1. constituting, or occurring as, an exception; not ordinary or average; esp., much above average in quality, ability, etc. [exceptional talents ] ☆ 2. needing special attention or presenting a special problem …   English World dictionary

  • exceptional — index atypical, best, extraordinary, individual, infrequent, irregular (not usual), notable, noteworthy …   Law dictionary

  • exceptional — 1846, from EXCEPTION (Cf. exception) + AL (Cf. al) (1). Related: exceptionally …   Etymology dictionary

  • exceptional — ► ADJECTIVE 1) unusual; not typical. 2) unusually good. DERIVATIVES exceptionally adverb …   English terms dictionary

  • exceptional — adj. VERBS ▪ be ▪ remain ▪ consider sb/sth ▪ The teacher considers Jamie s performance truly exceptional. ▪ do sth A …   Collocations dictionary

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