With less than two weeks to go until Election Day, Donald Trump is hitting the interview circuit hard. After providing a live demonstration for the American people of what to never do in a marriage—a topic in which he has considerable experience, of course—the GOP nominee dropped by the Eternal Word Television Network for an interview with one Raymond Arroyo. Trump and Arroyo covered a wide range of topics, most of which you long ago decided that you never want to hear Donald Trump discuss again. The one that matters, though, is one that Trump had never addressed before tonight. I speak of the mystery that has divided voters, perplexed pundits, and even flummoxed linguists all year: Mr. Trump, are you saying "bigly," or "big league"?
Behold, at about the 27:15 mark, your definitive answer.
Aha! Since this question arose in the first place because Donald Trump is hard to understand, let's go to the transcript, just to be safe.
There you have it, America. Donald Trump's odd-sounding pet phrase that he uses to qualitatively describe scope or magnitude is "big-league." It is not "bigly." And to Arroyo, for finally getting Trump on the record on what had become the campaign's most vexing remaining issue, thank you bigly.