worryingly [
'wʌriiŋli]
ad. 焦虑地, 烦恼地
worryingly[ adv ]
in a manner to cause worry
<adv.all>
Worryingly \Wor"ry*ing*ly\, adv.
In a worrying manner.
- It is effective, well-paced and worryingly soft-centred.
- Growth rates of both broad and narrow money have been accelerating, but not worryingly so.
- In its annual study of the sector, NatWest Securities worryingly finds that almost half the directors on the boards of the 117 investment trusts launched since 1986 are closely linked with management groups.
- Even in 1990, it was still 19 per cent higher. More worryingly, UK productivity gains were dissipated through high real wages.
- They give the gallery Pounds 150,000 a year but their reserves total Pounds 42m and a worryingly high proportion of their annual income disappears in management costs.
- Falling interest rates have caused a stampede into equities around the world. As a result, many stocks and sectors have started to look worryingly expensive.
- He has what the Italians call a 'fixed tenor', of power and sometimes impressively dark intensity but little beauty, which seems to fall worryingly often on the flat side of notes and phrases.
- So long as this continues, the EC will be subject to fierce criticism not only by its partners but also, more worryingly, by its citizens.
- So why does that rhinoceros in the game park remind you worryingly of your lawyer? Possibly because it is thick-skinned, short-sighted and prone to charge unexpectedly.
- This left banks with heavy bad debts, in some cases worryingly concentrated with a handful of top customers.
- But, perhaps worryingly, the rest of the world seemed less important.