How to use in-sentence of “terribly”:
+ Fiesco feels terribly sad and tells Simon about the poison.
+ While a single cotton fiber is not terribly strong, when multiple curling fibers are straightened and twisted together, they form a strong, smooth thread that can be knitted or woven, as well as dyed.
+ If something is terribly broken, an admin may revert.
+ During his last years,he became terribly ill.
+ The Senate take a court case against Sextus as Titus waits impatiently, sure that his friend will be found not guilty; but the Senate finds him guilty, and a terribly sad Titus must sign Sextus’ death papers.
+ Riemann was terribly nervous about lecturing on this subject in front of the famous Gauss.
+ On narrow, terribly steep hills similarly could result in an accident or uncontrollably high speed, and so sliding was invented by a California surfer.
Example sentences of “terribly”:
+ He was terribly sad when Wagner died.
+ He is terribly upset, but runs off.
+ He found this terribly hard to bear.
+ Berlioz was terribly sad in 1867 when he heard that Louis had died in Havana of yellow fever.
+ He was terribly cruel and the Russian people suffered badly under his rule.
+ Mordvinov reported in his memoirs that the four Grand Duchesses looked “cold and visibly terribly upset” by Rasputin’s death.
+ He was terribly sad when Wagner died.
+ He is terribly upset, but runs off.
+ At this school, Sienkiewicz-Mercer was treated terribly for sixteen years.
+ We think it is likely that Gesualdo felt terribly guilt all his life about the murders he had committed, and these guilty feelings can be heard in his music.
+ When Eboli is left alone she expresses her feelings of terribly misery.
+ Boris becomes terribly distressed at this story.