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The phrase "terrifyingly loud" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a sound that is extremely loud to the point of causing fear or discomfort. Example: "The thunder was terrifyingly loud, shaking the windows and making everyone jump."
Exact(4)
It was terrifyingly loud, like King Kong murdering something.
He found it hard to get on with other children at his nursery, and later, when he went to a much bigger school, it was obvious the experience was terrifyingly loud, hectic and incomprehensible to him.
Every so often, a gun would go off, and a great roar of approval went up when, at last, one of the novice crews of the anti-aircraft batteries opened up and fired off a terrifyingly loud and exultant sustained burst into the sky.
Savage described the concert as a hugely ambitious, terrifyingly loud show, "spread over four acts and held together by a flimsy 'narrative' about Gaga and her dancer friends trying to get to a party".
Similar(55)
In a retrospective review for JazzTimes, Tom Terrell said that the album's kind of music would never be heard again and described it as "tomorrow's sound yesterday... a terrifyingly exhilarating aural asylum of wails, howls, clanks, chanks, telltale heartbeats, wah wah quacks, white noise and loud silences".
Terrifyingly different.
"It's terrifyingly easy".
It is all terrifyingly beautiful.
Terrifyingly flawless performers.
He is terrifyingly furious.
Terrifyingly, it can be.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com