If one wants to say the word bubbles angrily, one would need to do so in an angry or mean tone. One would also probably raise one's voice for the full effect of anger.
Because it just does
As we can not see your setup, there is no way we could detect any bubble that may have been in it.
what to do when catheter tube has bubbles in it
if they're colored bubbles they do.
yes there is all kinds of acid bubbles!!
Of course you can. It is possible to say anything angrily (though I'd struggle to think of a circumstance in which you might need to).
Angrily is an adverb. The easy way to tell is to ask if angrily describes a verb or a noun. For example, in "Angrily Joseph juggled for the disrespectful audience." 'angrily' describes Joseph's juggling, not Joseph. You can angrily stomp, angrily swear, angrily knock, angrily tell, and angrily defenestrate, but you cannot angrily Joseph, angrily beaver, or angrily window.
To say 'bubbles' in Korean, you just say bubbles, but say it so it sounds like 'Booblies'.
angrily
Yes, because it describes a verb. You can look angrily at someone. You can angrily hit something. But you can't be 'angrily'.
most angrily
'Bubbles" translates in Dutch as "belletjes".
bubbles is die Blasen in German
No, it is not a verb. The word angrily is an adverb.
He angrily said he did not want to see her again.She angrily shouted her brother's name.
I went home with a angrily face
the man shouted at the boy angrily