inaudibly
IPA: ɪnˈɔdʌbɫi
adverb
- In a manner which is incapable of being heard or not loud enough to be heard.
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Examples of "inaudibly" in Sentences
- It was as though she were asking me, inaudibly, “Feeling a bit jealous, kid?”
- My last gig was at 2am; a guy at the side of the stage said to me, almost inaudibly, "You've already done this bit."
- Where's my wife? he muttered almost inaudibly, his face buried in the pillow as she cleaned his waste from underneath him.
- But as each person stepped up to the counter to fork over the $200 impound fee, most simply muttered inaudibly underneath their breath.
- The glowing, expressive decorations in the Larghetto came off as trifles, and the passage-work in the Finale simply whizzed by, often inaudibly.
- The husband sighed inaudibly, returned to his half-filled plate of food, then removed himself from the room, leaving Mrs. Petty alone with her thoughts.
- There's an onstage jazz trio Peter Erskine, John Parricelli and John Paul Jones, no less who appear briefly and mostly inaudibly in a single short scene.
- Speaking to Alfie on the phone last week, he was almost inaudibly giddy, and told me about lots of frankly crazy and brilliant applications they have in mind, one of which is Borough Pong.
- Refugees beware: the United States, once a leader in refugee protection, is demonstrating to the world that a government can turn back any refugee by inaudibly uttering the words "national security."
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