Anyone touching that wire could get badly shocked. 任何人碰到那根电线都会遭到严重的电击。
badly
[ adv ]
to a severe or serious degree
<adv.all> fingers so badly frozen they had to be amputated badly injured a severely impaired heart is gravely ill was seriously ill
(`ill' is often used as a combining form) in a poor or improper or unsatisfactory manner; not well
<adv.all> he was ill prepared it ill befits a man to betray old friends the car runs badly he performed badly on the exam the team played poorly ill-fitting clothes an ill-conceived plan
evilly or wickedly
<adv.all> treated his parents badly to steal is to act badly
in a disobedient or naughty way
<adv.all> he behaved badly in school he mischievously looked for a chance to embarrass his sister behaved naughtily when they had guests and was sent to his room
with great intensity (`bad' is a nonstandard variant for `badly')
<adv.all> the injury hurt badly the buildings were badly shaken it hurts bad we need water bad
very much; strongly
<adv.all> I wanted it badly enough to work hard for it the cables had sagged badly they were badly in need of help he wants a bicycle so bad he can taste it
without skill or in a displeasing manner
<adv.all> she writes badly I think he paints very badly
in a disadvantageous way; to someone's disadvantage
<adv.all> the venture turned out badly for the investors angry that the case was settled disadvantageously for them
unfavorably or with disapproval
<adv.all> tried not to speak ill of the dead thought badly of him for his lack of concern
with unusual distress or resentment or regret or emotional display
<adv.all> they took their defeat badly took her father's death badly conducted himself very badly at the time of the earthquake
Badly \Bad"ly\, adv. In a bad manner; poorly; not well; unskillfully; imperfectly; unfortunately; grievously; so as to cause harm; disagreeably; seriously.
Note: Badly is often used colloquially for very much or very greatly, with words signifying to want or need.
But he apologised for behaviour which he said 'was not just inappropriate or boorish, but just plain wrong'. Mr Packwood conceded that 'the bonds of trust' linking him and the people of Oregon had been badly strained.
Police said a police brigadier and lieutenant who chanced by on another security mission tried to chase the running gunman, but he killed the brigadier and badly wounded the lieutenant.
"Belfast has suffered badly during the past 20 years," a final panel reads.
On Monday and Tuesday, rail services were badly disrupted by a ban on overtime by train drivers belonging to another union, the Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen.
Some Turkish politicians take this very badly, notably President Turgut Ozal who masterminded the 1987 application.
The year opened badly as worries about the approaching quarterly corporate reporting season and the effect of war on the economy sparked a 130-point decline in the first two weeks.
The capital and energy intensive Komag plant consumes about 5 per cent of the island's power and is badly hit by the regular power cuts.
While KKR's $90-a-share offer is $15 a share more than the RJR-Shearson group's, KKR officials badly want Mr. Johnson's management team to join them to continue guiding RJR.
It has also prevented many Russian businesses from buying badly needed raw materials and equipment from the West.
"There was no peace from World War II till 1970." Given the historical problems, some officials maintain that eastern Indonesia hasn't done badly at all.
It said the northern towns of Halabja and Darbandikhan were badly hit.
(I have known some open cars to shake so badly that the instruments became a blur on moderately rough surfaces.) The hood is super-efficient, too.
It matters little that the figure was badly distorted, or that the underlying news on inflation and wages is good, or even that the D-mark has been more stable in exchange markets recently.
West German shares, which are highly sensitive to foreign exchange swings, were badly battered by these events, brokers said.
"After he plays badly, I notice that I don't walk as close to him on the street, and I have to force myself to give him a hug."
Another American, 44-year-old John Thompson, said he was eager to see his 68-year-old mother in Germany because she is going blind. "I'm her only child and she wanted to see me badly," he said.
Nevertheless, if Mr Norman Lamont, the chancellor, announces severe fiscal tightening measures tomorrow, the foreign exchanges may react badly in anticipation of further monetary easing.
Association leaders felt badly served when the town of 3,500 year-round residents sent a bill for $2,500 for taxes on the garage property despite the group's nonprofit status.
But this time around, many Japanese institutions may buy less than they customarily do because numerous Japanese firms have been hurt badly by plummeting Tokyo stock prices.
Neither has a head for detail, and both can be remarkably verbose in a provincial brogue. Each was compared badly to a rival who regularly trounced him in the political arena - Helmut Schmidt and Margaret Thatcher, respec- tively.
In the long term, he argues, the yen's strength forces corporate Japan to make itself even more competitive. Some sectors have suffered badly at the hands of cheaper foreign competitors as the yen has appreciated.
It appears that profits were resilient in spite of earlier fears that they would be badly affected by debt provisions.
U.S. officials believe Iran wants Western aid too badly to defy the embargo flagrantly.
During the eight-year Iran-Iraq war the terminal was badly damaged, and Iraq was forced to export oil by piping it through Turkey and Saudi Arabia and transporting it by truck through Jordan.
Except in the badly charred stands, there is a lush carpet of green grass growing through the soot and ash.
The prosecutor's filing said, "The law does not allow an exchange of money for jail time, even for the benefit of a badly needed societal purpose."
Lacking sufficient capital, United must lease rather than purchase badly needed new aircraft.
It was Wilson's first visit to Beijing since China violently crushed pro-democracy protests in June, badly shaking the confidence of Hong Kong residents about their future after Britain hands the colony back to China in 1997.
Hers is a world of uncomfortable things. She sees more fools than saints, but even for the saints, things often end badly.
If they go badly, it's because Rocco cocked it up.'