Exceptional in a sentence as an adjective

If you can hit 10% a week you're doing exceptionally well.

3 weeks without a paycheck isn't exceptional in freelancing, at all.

Having to work in the weekends at all is a sign of bad project management, and should be exceptional.

Their recent growth performance has been exceptional, but both are still desperately poor countries by the standards set by Switzerland and Norway.

So far, Steve Jobs has, for all his eccentricities, succeeded in every other measure of leadership – to an exceptional degree.

Successful reexaminations should be a rare, exceptional case in a properly functioning patent system.

[1]This is a great example of why we should treat terrorism like any other crime, and why the police should never be trusted with exceptional powers simply because we feel under threat.

Except lockdowns are highly exceptional events - is asking your employees to stay late in a disaster situation at all like asking them not to telecommute?> "Its okay to say that.

He pays exceptional attention to any thermal envelope penetrations.

I think there's not so much a talent shortage so much as there's a shortage of engineers who are gifted at contrived puzzle questions and willing to accept average pay for exceptional ability.

And even if you choose to work below market, the <1% equity stake that most funded startups are going to offer you won't make it worth the opportunity cost in anything less than the most exceptional outcome.

He was described as "remote, coldly aloof, ruthless aristocrat, living in lonely magnificence, disdaining the common people... an exceptional man, a lone wolf whose strength and courage could be looked up to, but at the same time had to be feared; an eccentric, misanthropic genius whose haughty bearing, cold eye and steely reserve made it impossible to like or trust him." [Interesting anecdote: He had all the walls of his penthouse office at the Tribune covered with dark wood, including the door, so that after your meeting ended, you would have great difficulty finding the door to get back out, suffering under his humiliating gaze.

Exceptional definitions

adjective

far beyond what is usual in magnitude or degree; "a night of exceeding darkness"; "an exceptional memory"; "olympian efforts to save the city from bankruptcy"; "the young Mozart's prodigious talents"

See also: exceeding olympian prodigious surpassing

adjective

surpassing what is common or usual or expected; "he paid especial attention to her"; "exceptional kindness"; "a matter of particular and unusual importance"; "a special occasion"; "a special reason to confide in her"; "what's so special about the year 2000?"

See also: special

adjective

deviating widely from a norm of physical or mental ability; used especially of children below normal in intelligence; "special educational provisions for exceptional children"