detrimentally
/ˌdetrɪˈmentəli/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌdetrɪˈmentəli/ (ame, ipa) · /-ᵊlē -ᵊli/ (ame, mw)
detrimentally — 副詞
1. so that something is hurt, weakened, or made worse — usually said of a process,
有害地
造成傷害、損害或負面影響的方式
so that something is hurt, weakened, or made worse — usually said of a process, policy, or action whose harmful effect emerges over time.
The new tariff detrimentally affected small farmers across the region.
新關稅對該地區的小農造成不利的影響。
verb + detrimentally affected + object
Putri argued that late-night screen time was detrimentally shaping her teenage son's sleep habits.
Putri 認為深夜使用螢幕正不利地形塑她青少年兒子的睡眠習慣。
detrimentally + present participle in a that-clause
Long commutes through heavy traffic can act detrimentally on the heart over many years.
長時間在壅塞車流中通勤,多年下來會對心臟產生不利的作用。
Cutting the music budget would impact students detrimentally, said the headmaster from Quito.
校長來自基多,他表示刪減音樂預算將對學生造成不利的影響。
Bee numbers in the orchard had been detrimentally affected by years of pesticide spraying.
果園裡的蜜蜂數量多年來因噴灑農藥而受到不利的影響。
- harmfully
more everyday; suggests direct injury rather than gradual negative effect
- adversely
very close in register and meaning; slightly more neutral, often paired with `affect`
- damagingly
stresses lasting damage to a thing's quality or reputation; less formal than `detrimentally`
- injuriously
rare and legalistic; only used in formal or legal writing
- beneficially
opposite outcome — the action helps rather than harms
- favourably
suggests a positive reception or result
文法句型
verb + detrimentally
detrimentally + past participle
用法筆記
Almost always modifies verbs of effect or change (`affect`, `impact`, `influence`, `shape`, `act on`) and most often appears in passive constructions (`be detrimentally affected by`). Rarely modifies adjectives.