"After my mother told me I had to stay home to babysit my little sister, I stormed outside, slamming the door angrily behind me."
The teacher glared angrily at the noisy students.
speaking angrily
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.
When your boss is angrily questioning you, a jocular response would be a bad idea. The publishers did not appreciate the humor in the author's jocular comments about their other writers.
Yes, because it describes a verb. You can look angrily at someone. You can angrily hit something. But you can't be 'angrily'.
I stared at him angrily after he threw the ball at me.
John turned to him and said angrily, "Why are you following me?"
the angrily boy said a bad word.
angrily
The teacher glared angrily at the noisy students.
I went home with a angrily face
the man shouted at the boy angrily
He angrily tore his paper in half.
"You are SO WRONG", squealed Sian angrily.
He angrily said he did not want to see her again.She angrily shouted her brother's name.
Assuming you mean you want a sentence using the word 'angrily': Susie angrily picked up her water bottle after suffering defeat in a friendly game of soccer.
The Chinese artist angrily stomped out of the room. The storm raged angrily as the cat napped peacefully by the fire.