What is another word for with great care?

Pronunciation: [wɪð ɡɹˈe͡ɪt kˈe͡ə] (IPA)

The phrase "with great care" implies an attentive and diligent approach to a task. However, there are several synonyms that can convey a similar meaning. "Meticulously" emphasizes the attention to detail and precision. "Thoroughly" suggests a comprehensive and exhaustive approach. "Cautiously" conveys a sense of caution and prudence. "Diligently" stresses the importance of persistence and hard work. "Attentively" highlights a focused and observant methodology. "Painstakingly" emphasizes the effort and dedication required to complete a task. Regardless of the synonym used, the underlying message is one of careful consideration and precision.

What are the hypernyms for With great care?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with With great care

  • I was never a quick writer, but composed with great care and efforts.
    Joseph Haydn
  • The books we read should be chosen with great care, that they may be, as an Egyptian king wrote over his library, "The medicines of the soul."
    Paxton Hood
  • That was a decisive moment in Lincoln’s career, and that’s the situation he faced when he got up to give his “House Divided” speech on June 16th of 1858. It was a crisis of his own career. It was also, in my opinion, the gravest crisis this country has ever faced, because the greatest danger to the future of the country came not, I think, from the pro-slavery argument, but from the morally neutral argument of Douglas. And that’s a long story and you’ll find it all spelled out in great detail in my book, which I hope you will read with great care.
    Harry V. Jaffa
  • Before one is successful that is before any one is ready to pay money for anything you do then you are certain that every word you have written is an important word to have written and that any word you have written is as important as any other word and you keep everything you have written with great care.
    Gertrude Stein
  • He wrote with great care, and with a sharpness, vivacity, and variety of epithet that give immediate and continuing pleasure, but he was not in any serious sense a novelist or even a writer of fiction. His emotionally injured self is the sole character of his fictions, with everybody else seen through the haze of his paranoia, like figures in a fun-fair mirror.
    Frederick Rolfe

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