Loud in a sentence as an adjective

"Am I the only person that laughed out loud at this?

It's a free country!Alvy Singer: He can give it... do you have to give it so loud?

It was like the wind was sucked out of the room behind the barrier, but the floor was so loud only the two all-male teams heard the question.

The papers he and his colleagues produce[3] are thought-provoking, pointed, and sometimes laugh-out-loud funny.

Facebook has not "placed a long-term bet"; they are actively engineering that reality right now, despite loud and frequent objections from users.

Loud in a sentence as an adverb

> I mean, someone reverting your code because of a personal vendetta?I laughed out loud when I read this and several other specific details in the story.

I'm done with movie theaters full of loud other people who aren't me, and the litany of other issues that have been discussed to death from overpriced tickets, to concessions, to 3D projector woes and content.

Frankly I think the cable companies brought it upon themselves with the constant loud commercial interruptions, the garbage programming, and the utterly miserable cable box interfaces.

You also get a "hit" of dopamine when there is a loud, surprising noise, and any number of similar situations. Including good, natural situations. Including normal sex. This doesn't mean that "your dopamine levels get out of whack".When you say that 'life just becomes more dull' and 'distracting yourself from negative emotions' it sounds like you are describing dysthymia or depression more than anything specific to porn.

As our office handed down arrest records and probation terms for riding dirt bikes in the street, cutting through a neighbor’s yard, hosting loud parties, fighting, or smoking weed – shenanigans that had rarely earned my own classmates anything more than raised eyebrows and scoldingsWhether these crimes deserve any police attention is something that could be discussed, but surely we can agree that prosecuting black kids but not white kids is something that drives inequality in society?

Loud definitions

adjective

characterized by or producing sound of great volume or intensity; "a group of loud children"; "loud thunder"; "her voice was too loud"; "loud trombones"

adjective

tastelessly showy; "a flash car"; "a flashy ring"; "garish colors"; "a gaudy costume"; "loud sport shirts"; "a meretricious yet stylish book"; "tawdry ornaments"

adjective

used chiefly as a direction or description in music; "the forte passages in the composition"

See also: forte

adverb

with relatively high volume; "the band played loudly"; "she spoke loudly and angrily"; "he spoke loud enough for those at the back of the room to hear him"; "cried aloud for help"

See also: loudly aloud