curiously
We went inside Furiously. Lion furiously killed him.
The comparative form of "furiously" is more furiously, and the superlative form is most furiously.
We may use Furiously as swiftly or intensively e.g. You dont should be peevish do everything furiously!
The driver furiously honked his horn as the car in front of him refused to move.
If you mean furiously as in angrily: heatedly, infuriatedly, irately, If you mean furiously as in violently or with bad intentions: malevolently, maleficiently, savagely, venomously If you mean furiously as in quickly/wildly: frantically, frenziedly, wildly
He furiously tore the book apart and threw it on the ground.
The word "furiously" is an adverb. It modifies verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs to indicate the manner in which an action is done. In this case, "furiously" describes how something is done with intensity or rage.
The man furiously attacked the homecoming queen to get her crown
four
Furiously the rowers paddled to the shore, their eyes wide with terror as bullets whistled past their heads. For at least ten minutes we were engaged in a loud and tedious argument in which she furiously proclaimed that I was the one who had forgotten her handbag at the train station.
crossly, furiously, irately
"Colorless green ideas sleep furiously" is Noam Chomsky's famous example of a perfectly grammatical sentence that has no meaning.