Majorly

Etymology
major + -ly

Adverb

 * 1)  significantly; very, very much
 * 2) *1984, Joseph Westlund, Shakespeare's Reparative Comedies: A Psychoanalytic View of the Middle Plays, University of Chicago Press, Page 92
 * “Campus police break up parties routinely, but nobody really gets majorly busted.”
 * 1) *2000, Scholastic, Inc. Staff (eds), Diary of a Junior Year, Scholastic Paperbacks, Page 135
 * This thing is I am majorly stressing because I no prom date set up.
 * 1) *2004, John Ringo & Julie Cochrane, Cally's War, Baen Books
 * The Taco Hell was okay the last time I tried it, but that was a few months ago when I was majorly low on cash.
 * 1) *2005, Lauren Mechling, Laura Moser, The Rise and Fall of a 10th-grade Social Climber, Graphia Books, Page 173
 * “Mimi, here’s the thing. When somebody in that crowd goes and does something majorly out of control like that, it’s only a matter of days before the rest of the girls in school make sure they've caught up. [...]”
 * 1) mostly, primarily
 * 2) *1930, American Orthopsychiatric Association, American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, American Orthopsychiatric Association, Page 634
 * Significant contrasts can be drawn between the course of personality development in which children are majorly reared by grandparents who have [...]
 * 1) *1963, Royal Economic Society (Great Britain) and British Economic Association, The Economic Journal: The Quarterly Journey of the British Economic Association, Macmillan, Page 686
 * This is due not solely, or even majorly, to the fact the above type of analysis concerns itself primarily with what will happen in the long run.
 * 1) *2000, Bernard F. Feldman, Joseph G. Zinkl, Nemi C. Jain (eds), Schalm's Veterinary Hematology, Blackwell Publishing, Page 260
 * This chapter is majorly devoted to the primary immunodeficiencies that have been documented in domestic animals.