full well
Adverb

full well (not comparable)

  1. Very well
    • 1460-1500, The Towneley Playsː
      He is so fair, without lease, he seems full well to sit on this.
    • 1829. Charles Burroughs. Memoirs and select papers of Horace B. Morse ↗. Miller and Brewster. pages 83-87
      Besides, there is always a tendency—indeed an interest—to take on what one knows full well.
    • 2006. Nadia Yassine. Full Sails Ahead. Justice and Spirituality Publications. page 2.
      He knows full well that I don't like that club.



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