[missing the point]On the contrary, combining adverbs is easy. If X is very uncertain, and Y is very uncertain, then X—Y is very, very uncertain. [/missing the point]
^_^
Why isn’t it “very, very uncertain, uncertain”? Anyway, ‘very’ is an adjective. ‘Verily’ is the adverb.
But without the math to prove it, you may wrongly conclude that the uncertainties cancel out and X—Y is quite certain indeed.
[missing the point]
On the contrary, combining adverbs is easy. If X is very uncertain, and Y is very uncertain, then X—Y is very, very uncertain. [/missing the point]
^_^
Why isn’t it “very, very uncertain, uncertain”? Anyway, ‘very’ is an adjective. ‘Verily’ is the adverb.
But without the math to prove it, you may wrongly conclude that the uncertainties cancel out and X—Y is quite certain indeed.