What is another word for extreme cases?

Pronunciation: [ɛkstɹˈiːm kˈe͡ɪsɪz] (IPA)

Extreme cases can be replaced with several synonyms to give emphasis to the gravity of certain situations. Some of these synonyms include exceptional cases, extraordinary cases, rare cases, severe cases, acute cases, critical cases, and extreme circumstances. These synonyms convey the idea of a situation or scenario that is far beyond the normal or typical. They suggest that the situation is one that requires urgent attention and intervention. In medical contexts, extreme cases often refer to rare and severe illnesses, while in legal and ethical contexts, they can refer to extreme violations or abuses of rights. Whatever the context, synonyms for extreme cases help to emphasize the need for immediate and decisive action.

What are the hypernyms for Extreme cases?

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

Famous quotes with Extreme cases

  • Congress seems drugged and inert most of the time... its idea of meeting a problem is to hold hearings or, in extreme cases, to appoint a commission.
    Shirley Chisholm
  • Our life is frittered away by detail. An honest man has hardly need to count more than his ten fingers, or in extreme cases he may add his ten toes, and lump the rest. Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity!
    Henry David Thoreau
  • The ideologies of the super-tribes exercised absolute power over all individual minds under their sway. In civilized regions the super-tribes and the overgrown natural tribes created an astounding mental tyranny. In relation to his natural tribe, at least if it was small and genuinely civilized, the individual might still behave with intelligence and imagination. Along with his actual tribal kinsmen he might support a degree of true community unknown on Earth. He might in fact be a critical, self-respecting and other-respecting person. But in all matters connected with the super-tribes, whether national or economic, he behaved in a very different manner. All ideas coming to him with the sanction of nation or class would be accepted uncritically and with fervor by himself and all his fellows. As soon as he encountered one of the symbols or slogans of his super-tribe he ceased to be a human personality and became a sort of de-cerebrate animal, capable only of stereotyped reactions. In extreme cases his mind was absolutely closed to influences opposed to the suggestion of the super-tribe. Criticism was either met with blind rage or actually not heard at all. Persons who in the intimate community of their small native tribe were capable of great mutual insight and sympathy might suddenly, in response to tribal symbols, be transformed into vessels of crazy intolerance and hate directed against national or class enemies. In this mood they would go to any extreme of self-sacrifice for the supposed glory of the super-tribe. Also they would show great ingenuity in contriving means to exercise their lustful vindictiveness upon enemies who in favorable circumstances could be quite as kindly and intelligent as themselves.
    Olaf Stapledon
  • A poem is sort of an onion of contexts, and you can no more locate any of the important meanings exclusively in a part than you can locate a relation in one of its terms. The significance of a part may be greatly modified or even in extreme cases completely reversed by later and larger parts and by the whole.
    Randall Jarrell

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