释义 |
discouragingly
dis·cour·age D0260600 (dĭ-skûr′ĭj, -skŭr′-)tr.v. dis·cour·aged, dis·cour·ag·ing, dis·cour·ag·es 1. To deprive of confidence, hope, or spirit: Making so little progress after so much effort discouraged us.2. To dissuade or deter (someone) from doing something: My adviser discouraged me from applying to big universities.3. To try to prevent by expressing disapproval or raising objections: The agency discouraged all travel to the areas hardest hit by the disease. [Middle English discoragen, from Old French descoragier : des-, dis- + corage, courage; see courage.] dis·cour′age·a·ble adj.dis·cour′ag·er n.dis·cour′ag·ing·ly adv.Synonyms: discourage, dishearten, dismay, dispirit These verbs mean to make less hopeful or enthusiastic: researchers who were discouraged by the problem's magnitude; apathy that disheartened the instructor; did not let the technical difficulties dismay them; a failure that dispirited the team.Antonym: encourageThesaurusAdv. | 1. | discouragingly - in a discouraging manner; "the failure rate on the bar exam is discouragingly high"encouragingly - in an encouraging manner; "`Go on,' he said encouragingly to his student" | TranslationsIdiomsSeediscouragediscouragingly
Antonyms for discouraginglyadv in a discouraging mannerAntonyms |