cheerfully
cheerfully — adverb
1. showing happiness and a positive attitude through the way you speak, move, or be
showing happiness and a positive attitude through the way you speak, move, or behave towards others
Theo cheerfully greeted each customer as they walked through the door.
cheerfully + verb of greeting
Despite the rain, Aiko cheerfully hummed a tune while setting the table.
Ravi cheerfully offered to drive his elderly neighbour to the clinic.
"Good morning!" Hana called out cheerfully, her smile brightening the hallway.
The children cheerfully helped Mrs. Park plant flowers in her garden.
- happily
more general; can describe any positive action, not necessarily visible cheerfulness
- gladly
suggests willingness or eagerness rather than visible happy mood
- brightly
focuses on the energetic, lively quality of the cheerfulness
- merrily
more literary; suggests light-hearted fun, often in group settings
文法句型
adverb before verb
adverb after verb
adverb before adjective
用法筆記
Commonly modifies verbs of greeting, offering help, and performing everyday tasks. The adverb emphasises the positive emotional quality of the action, not just the fact that it happened.
常見錯誤
2. used to describe the appearance of a space whose bright colours or pleasant look
used to describe the appearance of a space whose bright colours or pleasant look create a positive mood in those who see it
The kitchen was painted a cheerfully bright yellow that lifted everyone's mood.
cheerfully + adjective (bright)
Yellow curtains hung cheerfully in the window, catching the afternoon sun.
The café was decorated cheerfully with fresh flowers and colourful tablecloths.
A cheerfully painted sign pointed the way to the village market.
The little house stood cheerfully on the hillside, its red roof visible from afar.
文法句型
adverb + adjective
adverb modifying a description
用法筆記
Used to describe physical spaces, colours, decorations, and visual features — not people's moods. If the subject is a person, sense 1 applies instead.
3. without feeling guilt, worry, or embarrassment about something that might normal
without feeling guilt, worry, or embarrassment about something that might normally cause concern
Leila cheerfully admitted that she had forgotten about the meeting.
cheerfully + admit (no embarrassment)
Tomás cheerfully spent his entire savings on a one-way ticket to Japan.
The old man cheerfully ignored the doctor's advice and ate another piece of cake.
Yara cheerfully accepted the blame even though the mistake was not her fault.
Kofi cheerfully paid the fine without arguing, saying it was his own fault.
- blithely
very similar in meaning but more formal and literary; can imply a lack of proper seriousness
- unconcernedly
describes the lack of worry but without the positive, happy tone of cheerfully
- lightly
suggests not treating something as important or serious
- regretfully
feeling or showing sorrow about something one has done
- anxiously
in a worried or nervous way, the opposite of unconcerned calm
文法句型
adverb + verb of admission/spending/accepting
用法筆記
This sense often carries a slightly ironic or surprising tone — the speaker or observer finds it notable that the person is so unconcerned. Frequently used with verbs like admit, spend, ignore, accept, pay, and confess.