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Leibniz Zhao
What's the difference between "read aloud" ,"read loud" and "read loudly"?
31 de ago. de 2021 12:43
Respuestas · 3
1
"Reading aloud" is reading out loud and not in your head.
"Reading loudly" is when you read aloud, but you do it very loudly, like shouting.
31 de agosto de 2021
1
Hi Junnan. "Read aloud" = read so that other people can hear you (read and speak at the same time). For example, in a language class a teacher might say "Junnan, please read the first paragraph of the text aloud".
You can also say "Read out loud" which has the same meaning as "read aloud".
Loudly = noisily/in a way that produces a lot of noise.
For example: "He was talking very loudly in the library and everyone was annoyed".
So, if someone is "reading loudly" they are reading in a noisy way (although this is quite strange haha).
"Read loud" isn't correct.
31 de agosto de 2021
1
Read aloud = read out loud = say the words as you're reading.
Read loud is technically wrong, although people do say it. It should be read loudly because read is a verb, so you need an adverb. Either way, it means read aloud... but with more volume...like a teacher talking to a student in class...read the paragraph aloud, but as there's a lot of noise coming from outside, read loudly.
31 de agosto de 2021
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Leibniz Zhao
Competencias lingüísticas
Chino (mandarín), Inglés, Japonés
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés, Japonés
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