actually
actually — adverb
1. used to stress that what you are saying is the truth, especially when giving rea
used to stress that what you are saying is the truth, especially when giving real information about a situation.
Vesna looks young, but she is actually thirty-five years old.
actually + adjective phrase to assert the real fact
The recipe sounds difficult, but it is actually quite simple to follow.
actually + adverb phrase to correct an impression
Do you actually know Ravi, or have you only heard about him?
Linnea said she could fix the bike, and she actually did it in ten minutes.
Nobody believed Yara at first, but her story actually turned out to be true.
- supposedly
marks a claim that may not be true
- apparently
marks something that only seems true
文法句型
actually + verb phrase
subject + actually + verb
用法筆記
Often pairs with adjectives (true, simple, easy, hard) and verbs of speech or knowledge (know, mean, say). Distinguish from sense 2: this sense simply asserts truth, while sense 2 signals the truth is unexpected.
常見錯誤
2. used when adding a fact that goes against what the listener probably thinks, to
used when adding a fact that goes against what the listener probably thinks, to mark it as unexpected.
I thought the test would be hard, but I actually finished it in twenty minutes.
contrastive: expectation clause + but + actually + outcome
The new café looks tiny, but it actually seats forty people inside.
marks an unexpected positive fact
Most people hate Mondays, but Hiro actually enjoys the start of the week.
Yara seems quiet, but in team meetings she is actually very direct with her colleagues.
The film got bad reviews, but Aunt Rosa actually loved every minute of it.
- surprisingly
more direct; openly labels the fact as a surprise
- in reality
formal; stresses contrast with appearance
- as it happens
informal spoken phrase with similar contrast meaning
- predictably
marks an expected outcome instead
文法句型
actually + clause
clause + , actually
用法筆記
Subject of the surprise is often a person whose reaction or behaviour breaks the expected pattern. Frequently follows the connector 'but' or 'though'. Distinguish from sense 1: here the speaker signals contrast with the listener's belief, not just truth.
常見錯誤
3. used at the start or end of a sentence to soften a disagreement, a correction, o
used at the start or end of a sentence to soften a disagreement, a correction, or a refusal so that it sounds friendlier.
Actually, I would rather stay home tonight, if you don't mind.
sentence-initial 'Actually,' softening a refusal
My name is Daniel, actually, not David — please call me Daniel.
tag position: clause + , actually for gentle correction
Actually, I think we left the keys on the kitchen table, not in the car.
Thanks for the coffee, but I prefer tea, actually.
Actually, the meeting is on Thursday, not Wednesday — sorry for the confusion.
- in fact
slightly more formal; less of a softener
- to be honest
informal; signals a personal, frank opinion
- well
very informal opener; weaker correction
文法句型
Actually, + clause
clause + , actually
用法筆記
Common in informal speech and emails to take the edge off a contradiction. Often appears with hedging language ('I think', 'I'd rather', 'sorry'). Distinguish from sense 2: this sense softens what the speaker is about to say, while sense 2 flags the listener's belief as wrong.