noisily

/ˈnɔɪzɪli/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈnɔɪzɪli/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈnȯizə̇lē -li/ (ame, mw)

noisily — adverb

1. producing loud, often bothersome sounds that people nearby find hard to ignore.

1.副詞B1
釋義

producing loud, often bothersome sounds that people nearby find hard to ignore.

例句

Diego and his friends ran noisily down the wooden stairs of the old school.

noisily after verb (most common position)

Aiko's old refrigerator hummed noisily throughout the warm summer evening.

collocation: appliance + hum noisily

同義詞
  • loudly

    neutral; describes high volume but not necessarily unpleasant or disturbing

  • raucously

    describes loud, harsh, disorderly sounds; more specific to human groups or crowds

  • vociferously

    formal; used for loud, forceful speech, complaints, or protests

反義詞
  • quietly

    making little or no sound; opposite of noisily

  • silently

    making no sound at all; stronger than quietly

文法句型

verb + noisily

noisily + verb

用法筆記

Noisily carries a negative or mildly annoying tone — it suggests the sound is unwanted or bothersome to hearers. This distinguishes it from loudly, which simply describes high volume without judgment. Noisily can appear either before or after the main verb; before-verb placement adds slight emphasis to the manner of the action.

常見錯誤

The room was noisily.
The children in the room played noisily.
💡Noisily is an adverb, not an adjective. It must modify an action verb, not describe a state.
He loudly chewed his food at dinner.' (when meaning disturbingly).
He chewed his food noisily at dinner, annoying everyone at the table.
💡Noisily implies the sound bothered others; loudly only describes volume.