horribly
horribly — 副詞
1. used to describe an action as shockingly bad or to intensify a negative adjectiv
可怕地
以極糟或令人不快的方式;強調負面形容詞
used to describe an action as shockingly bad or to intensify a negative adjective such as embarrassing, expensive, or wrong
Ravi screamed horribly when the lights went out during the storm.
Ravi 在暴風雨中燈光熄滅時,恐怖地尖叫起來。
horribly + verb showing manner
The cake that Priya baked for the party tasted horribly sweet.
Priya 為派對烤的蛋糕,甜得嚇人。
horribly + adjective (taste)
Diego was horribly embarrassed when he fell off the chair in front of everyone.
Diego 在眾人面前從椅子上摔下來,感到極度尷尬。
The night-shift nurse felt horribly tired after working sixteen hours straight.
值夜班的護士連續工作十六小時後,累得不得了。
Aiko felt horribly lonely on her first night in the new city.
Aiko 在新城市的第一個晚上,感到非常孤單。
- terribly
most common and interchangeable in almost all contexts; slightly less intense
- dreadfully
more formal and literary; used more in British English
- awfully
very common in informal speech; can sound weaker in some contexts ('awfully good')
- appallingly
stronger and more formal; implies moral shock
- wonderfully
opposite in manner; describes actions done in a wonderful way
- beautifully
opposite in manner; actions done in a beautiful or pleasing way
文法句型
horribly + adjective
verb + horribly
用法筆記
Can be placed before an adjective (horribly wrong, horribly expensive) to intensify a negative quality, or after a verb (treated horribly, failed horribly) to describe the manner of an action. A common intensifier in everyday speech, slightly stronger than 'very'.