deafeningly Meaning in Bengali
Similer Words:
deafensdeafer
deafest
deafness
deal
dealer
dealers
dealership
dealerships
dealing
dealings
deals
dealt
dean
deanery
deafeningly's Usage Examples:
engage in exchanges, whose character range from almost inaudible to deafeningly loud.
such as "flooding in engine room lower level" (if possible; flooding is deafeningly loud).
Regis New York, with the latter deafeningly playing opera music to the point that his room trembled.
stepping stones, to difficult-to-sit-on furniture, to a kitchen filled with deafeningly loud appliances, every facet of Villa Arpel emphasizes the impracticality.
Blatant as ever, deafeningly loud, strutting like a parody of every tragedy queen, male or female.
attempt to make the Roman civilians leave, Asterix has Cacofonix to sing deafeningly loud outside the mansions.
He went on: "The third act begins so deafeningly that total stupor would be ensured even if the rest were less long-winded.
screaming, "What is happening to me?!" implying that the low-pitched tone is deafeningly loud to his ears.
no set definition of what screamo sounds like but screaming over once deafeningly loud rocking noise and suddenly quiet, melodic guitar lines is a theme.
The rocket thrust-chamber's supersonic exhaust jet makes a deafeningly loud (130 decibels), shrill screeching sound, very different from the.
Bradshaw commented that the response from the audience to such lines was "deafeningly immature" and would "inevitably be repeated in every cinema in the land.
heard, and if in order to be heard in the hullabaloo it must be shouted deafeningly with noisy instruments, then it is not God’s Word; create silence! Ah.
Lars Gotrich of NPR described Soused as "deafeningly sublime" and "a dark and wild leap into the abyss that was also pretty.
The factories all over Britain were often unheated and deafeningly noisy.
and pebbles", parodying the glut of "natural", earthy, and crunchy (deafeningly, in this case) granola-based cereals popular in the mid-1970s.
sweltering Sydney summer (when many concert tours were scheduled) and deafeningly loud in heavy rain.