What's the difference between noisily and slosh?

Noisily


Definition:

  • (adv.) In a noisy manner.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The RWA is noisily supported by the Association of American Publishers , which has as members more than 50 scholarly societies – including, ironically, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, which by its implicit support of the RWA is making itself an association for the retardation of science.
  • (2) Oldsters originally from Algeria or Indochina, Corsica or Greece chat on chairs in the sun while kids play noisily.
  • (3) The proximity and freshness of the life Olney knew was celebrated in the carnival atmosphere of dinners on the terrace lighted by strings of coloured bulbs, presided over by the great toad Victor, who noisily descended the steps at dusk to observe the terrace activity.
  • (4) More than 2,000 Republicans turned up at another Boston hotel last night to noisily celebrate a rare victory after heavy defeats in the 2006 congressional elections and again in 2008 for the White House.
  • (5) Supporters of Sisi, and those opposed to his regime , noisily sought to drown each other out on Thursday, separated only by a police van and officers.
  • (6) Bisola Edun's electricity generator sits outside her small Lagos fashion shop and factory, noisily churning out heat and fumes for five hours every day.
  • (7) I get the feeling that in the last week or so, doctors generally are beginning to realise that I and Jeremy Hunt may be right, however noisily their leaders may huff and puff.
  • (8) Given that the UK was part of the EU, and also linked by other busy immigration routes to its vast former empire, and to the US, a stable or falling population, as had existed throughout the 1970s – a period of perceived British decline that Thatcher had noisily promised to reverse – could hardly be assumed.
  • (9) As her young nieces play noisily in the yard, Velásquez says many of her neighbours have suffered the same classic Zika symptoms – fever, rash and conjunctivitis.
  • (10) If, at a polite drinks do, a man starts noisily doing a shit in the corner of the room, the dignified response is to avert your gaze.
  • (11) Within minutes of his criticism of Israel for its treatment of the Palestinians, delegations from various countries began to rise from their seats and noisily left the chamber.
  • (12) "Because I shall continue to be privately annoyed at those who jump the bus queue, those who stand smoking in large groups outside their office, drinkers who block the footpath outside a pub on a summer's evening, those who put their feet on the seats on public transport, those who protest noisily outside parliament or my local bank, but none of that surely should risk an injunctive procedure on the grounds of nuisance and annoyance."
  • (13) I decide to swim noisily, and splash like a three-year-old.
  • (14) The children did (as children do) a lot of grappling and wrestling, bickered, vied noisily for attention.
  • (15) But in the 1920s, scarred by the crackdown on German Americans and socialists during World War I, he was a radical freethinker who noisily waged war against the booboisie (his term for the stupid and the gullible), religion and the business-dominated status quo, who ridiculed Warren Harding and supported Sacco and Vanzetti.
  • (16) David Silva was exhilarating and there was the hard evidence here why City were so determined Yaya Touré should not be cut free when the Ivorian’s agent was noisily speculating about a transfer last season.
  • (17) The Who's My Generation comes on and he sings along with it, noisily and throatily.
  • (18) How does Lily, whose songs have always been noisily personal, feel about the eras of Lily that have come before?
  • (19) Occupying a grand Victorian building in what is still a grand boulevard despite the noisily bustling lunchtime crowds, its doors sweep open to usher customers into a large open carpeted room, dotted almost sparsely with stuff relating to your money.
  • (20) The protests were peaceful, though tensions rose when a marching band, along with about 100 demonstrators, crowded noisily into the lobby of an office building where they asked a housing developer to roll back rent increases.

Slosh


Definition:

  • () Alt. of Sloshy

Example Sentences:

  • (1) While money sloshed through the art world, prices went up, and quality often went down, to the point where a skull covered in diamonds became the most talked about and reproduced work of the decade.
  • (2) None of the money sloshing around the city trickled down to preserve the centre for homeless youth that closed in 2013, or the oldest black-owned black-focused bookstore in the country, which closed in 2014, or San Francisco’s last lesbian bar, which folded in 2015, or the African Orthodox Church of St John Coltrane, which is now facing eviction from the home it found after an earlier eviction during the late-1990s dotcom boom.
  • (3) Appearance: Mountains, forests, fast-flowing rivers, picturesque castles, sleepy villages, horse carts, elderly peasants ploughing land with age-old implements, blacksmiths sloshed on the deadly local brew palinka plying their time-honoured trade.
  • (4) Its mission can be distilled as follows: There is so much private wealth sloshing around our planet (thanks in very large part to the deregulation and privatisation frenzy that Bill Clinton unleashed on the world while president) that every single problem on earth, no matter how large, can be solved by convincing the ultra-rich to do the right things with their loose change.
  • (5) On a day when the skies were ashen from the smoke of distant wildfires, Chase Hurley kept his eyes trained on the slower-moving disaster at ground level: collapsing levees, buckling irrigation canals, water rising up over bridges and sloshing over roads.
  • (6) You can see the bite marks.” Clapper sits me down at a conference table with some chocolate biscuits and begins puffing on a black contraption with a window through which I can see a yellow-brown liquid sloshing.
  • (7) Part of Mr Putin's brain is transplanted into Mr Berlusconi's, turning him into a confused, vodka sloshing, Russian speaker worried about some men trapped in a submarine.
  • (8) ‘I will be glad to report if down in Cornwall we see any glimmer of all this wealth sloshing round ...
  • (9) Despite the squeeze on real earnings and the negative impact on confidence from the euro crisis, money supply growth has picked up and with more money sloshing around there has been more growth.
  • (10) I will be glad to report if down in Cornwall we see any glimmer of all this wealth sloshing round.....
  • (11) The amount of grey money sloshing around at the moment is all about politics.” Nigeria is considered one of the most corrupt countries in the world, with Transparency International ranking it 136th out of 174 on its corruption perception index.
  • (12) When cavities have formed then impulsive movements may occur with them and enlargement of the cavities may be continued by sloshing of the fluid within them.
  • (13) At festivals, they just about serve a purpose – doubling up as a sleeping bag, storing cans of beer in your kangaroo pouch – but at indoor shows, you'll regret feeling like you're sloshing around in an elephant's womb.
  • (14) At the same time, there is far too much loose cash sloshing around at the top, leading to unwise risks and toxic investments.
  • (15) They were everywhere – seven on the front bench, and four in the row behind, and three in the row behind that, lined up like neat little sandbags on either side of the PM, to keep at bay any accusations of sexism still sloshing around.
  • (16) It's sloshing it down outside and Rufus Hound and a young woman whom I'm afraid I don't recognise are gladhanding celebs doing their best not to look cheesed off by the rain.
  • (17) Everyone is completely sloshed when they eventually sit down to dinner at 9pm.
  • (18) Glenn is sloshing in yet more alcohol to "keep Mary happy".
  • (19) Mathew Horsman, director of strategic analysis and financing company Mediatique, said the deals suggested investors' confidence was improving: "There has been a lot of pent-up cash sloshing around, with people being willing to deal once the market is right.
  • (20) 2.31pm BST Caroline Davies writes from the scene: Caryll Foster, 53, from Kingston on Thames, and Maria Scott, 42, from Newcastle upon Tyne, camped overnight under blue tarpaulin in the sloshing rain outside St James's Palace.

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