convivially 的定义
convivially 近义词
等同于 socially
等同于 agreeably
convivially 的近义词 24 个
- affably
- affirmatively
- amiably
- amicably
- appropriately
- benevolently
- charmingly
- cheerfully
- favorably
- genially
- good-humoredly
- good-naturedly
- graciously
- happily
- kindly
- mutually
- obligingly
- peacefully
- pleasingly
- politely
- satisfactorily
- sympathetically
- well
- wonderfully
convivially 的反义词 3 个
更多convivially例句
- Detailed and convivial buyer personas would be crafted, CRMs loaded with masses of aggregated data sets, and if they so wished, marketers could still claim humble successes from spray-and-pray philosophies.
- To make the experience more convivial, families and communities have organized watch parties to support the Olympians—and watching those watch parties has become a sport all its own.
- While the hearing was mostly convivial, there were moments that underscored a partisan split on the environment.
- Sure, we’ll all bring out winter coats as it becomes necessary, but eating dinner in a parka detracts from the air of convivial comfort we usually seek when going out to a restaurant.
- Convivial by nature, he not doubt joined in when others were celebrating, allowing his boisterous high spirits free rein.
- This convivial mask he wears, along with his omnipresent flask, is obscuring a deep hurt stemming from his father.
- In person, Lundgren is far more convivial than his often monodrone on-screen persona suggests.
- He said he and other winemakers produce pot wine in small quantities, to be shared in “convivial moments with like-minded people.”
- Memories of more convivial press encounters were never more incongruent.
- Gone, too, is the hamlet of Garratt, whose mock elections of a Mayor caused such convivial excitement a century ago.
- Night after night he was absent until the latest hours at convivial clubs and card-parties.
- And then he went off to the Convivial Cannibals, where he ate an enormous tripe supper, and was more jovial and violent than ever.
- A convivial club, meeting once a week, established by Gibbon and other travellers.
- The brethren had begun the day by union for worship, they ended it with union for social and convivial festivity.