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Does the Phrase "Fully N Percent" Have Real Meaning?

For example:

Fully 46 percent of the recipients polled in the social sciences had...

Is this simply a way to avoid starting the sentence with a number? As in:

Forty-six percent...

I understand that, mathematically speaking, percents can be fractional. In the context of this example - and many others that I've seen - it just seems superfluous.

Yuck
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