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Actually

Actually is an English adverb used to indicate that what is being asserted is true in fact, often in contrast to what has been suggested or expected. Its core meaning is roughly "in fact" or "as a matter of fact," and it frequently introduces a correction, clarification, or emphatic statement. In spoken English it also serves as a discourse marker, signaling a pivot in a conversation: "I thought the film would be boring; actually, it was fantastic." Grammatically, actually usually modifies a verb, a clause, or the entire proposition; it is not a direct synonym for "very" or "truly" in all contexts.

The word is formed from the adjective actual plus the adverbial suffix -ly. It traces to early

Common usage notes: actually can shade a correction, counter a stereotype, or temper a statement, but overuse

Related expressions include in fact and as a matter of fact, which carry similar meaning but different

modern
English,
built
on
the
Latin
actualis
via
actual,
from
actus
"a
doing"
and
agere
"to
do."
The
sense
"in
reality"
gradually
broadened
into
flexible
uses
across
genres
and
registers.
or
misplacement
can
sound
pedantic
or
adversarial.
In
formal
writing,
some
editors
recommend
reserving
it
for
explicit
corrections
and
avoiding
it
as
a
casual
intensifier.
In
contrast,
in
conversational
English
its
pragmatic
value
as
a
softener
or
attention-getter
is
widely
recognized.
stylistic
connotations.