subconsciously
subconsciously — adverb
1. by means of hidden mental activity that affects the way you behave, feel, or thi
by means of hidden mental activity that affects the way you behave, feel, or think, without you realizing such activity is taking place.
Isabela subconsciously tapped her fingers on the table while working through the maths problem.
pre-verbal position with body-language verbs
The study found that shoppers subconsciously prefer products placed at eye level on the shelf.
modifying verbs of preference in psychology-related contexts
Quan had subconsciously memorised every turn on the route after driving it for a year.
Layla began to subconsciously copy her colleague's cheerful laugh after months together.
Felipe subconsciously hummed along when a familiar tune played on the radio.
- unconsciously
the closest and most common alternative; 'unconsciously' is preferred in everyday speech, while 'subconsciously' carries a slightly more technical or psychological tone
- automatically
stresses the mechanical, habitual nature of the action without any mental effort or intent
- instinctively
suggests the behaviour comes from inborn drives or gut reactions rather than from learned, buried memories
- consciously
the direct opposite; describes actions or thoughts done with full awareness and intent
- deliberately
emphasises that the action was chosen on purpose, not the result of hidden mental processes
文法句型
subconsciously + verb
had subconsciously + past participle
用法筆記
Frequently used with verbs describing automatic or repeated actions, emotional responses, and learned habits. Common in psychology and behavioural science but also appears in general writing and conversation. In everyday speech, 'unconsciously' is more common.