Totally in a sentence as an adverb

A machine who's intentions are totally pure - it's sole purpose is simply to learn.

The Internet access wasn't amazing but it was totally functional and we could VPN out through it.

He wakes up and the Tesla has lost 5 miles of range inexplicably -- but it therefore has become 45 miles, which looks totally different.

Even if two people are being totally respectful to start with, it can become psychologically difficult when the other person is getting more votes.

Lots of people seem to be totally immune to the consequences of rampant surveillance and frankly bizarre powers executed by the current set of governments.

How did Jobs manage to put his own mark on design decisions like this without totally micro-managing or hit-and-run-managing everything?

Totally definitions

adverb

to a complete degree or to the full or entire extent (`whole' is often used informally for `wholly'); "he was wholly convinced"; "entirely satisfied with the meal"; "it was completely different from what we expected"; "was completely at fault"; "a totally new situation"; "the directions were all wrong"; "it was not altogether her fault"; "an altogether new approach"; "a whole new idea"

See also: wholly entirely completely altogether whole