quantumly
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English
[edit]Etymology
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[edit]Adverb
[edit]quantumly (not comparable)
- In a quantum manner; in terms of quantum theory; according to the laws of quantum mechanics.
- 2012 February 25, ‘An uncertain future’, The Economist:
- Make a transistor too small, for example, and electrons within it can simply vanish from one place and reappear in another because their location is quantumly indeterminate.
- (figuratively) Involving a massive increase, especially over a short time or seemingly at once; in one giant leap forwards.
- 1996, John W. Pereira, Opening Nights: 25 Years of the Manhattan Theatre Club, page 323:
- 'What's different now,' said Grove, 'is that the landscape of the city has changed again, as inevitably it does, and the number of people who want a production from the Manhattan Theatre Club has grown sort of quantumly[.]'
- 2012, Bola Essien-Nelson, The Diary of a Desperate Naija Woman in the Year 2011, page 142:
- So today, I am here today to talk about something equally important and quantumly more interesting I have to say.
- 2018 July 31, Aqil Haziq Mahmud, “Singapore shoppers take 820 million plastic bags from supermarkets each year: Study”, in Channel NewsAsia:
- SEC chairman Isabella Huang-Loh said told reporters on Tuesday (Jul 31) that plastic bag usage in Singapore has 'quantumly grown' over the years.