WordLens

passively

1 of 1adverb
/ˈpæsɪvli/
1

without taking action or showing opposition

  • She listened passively as the manager criticized her performance.
  • He stood passively while others argued over the decision.
  • The country cannot afford to remain passively indifferent to rising tensions.
  • They watched passively as the opportunity slipped away.
  • Don't just accept unfair treatment passively; speak up.
Antonyms:
2

by receiving a signal or energy rather than generating it

  • The radar system detects aircraft passively to avoid revealing its position.
  • Modern satellites can passively track weather data from space.
  • The device passively scans for nearby Bluetooth signals.
  • Some surveillance tools gather information passively to remain undetected.
  • The phone app works passively in the background to collect movement data.
3

(grammar) in a way that reflects passive grammatical construction, where the subject receives the action

  • The sentence was passively written to emphasize the result, not the agent.
  • It's better to say "They made a mistake" than to express it passively as "A mistake was made."
  • In formal writing, arguments are often framed passively to sound more objective.
  • The message is passively delivered to avoid direct blame.
  • He revised the text because too many ideas were conveyed passively.