"Astonish" is a verb. It is used to describe the action of causing someone to feel sudden wonder or amazement.
The grand finale of the magic show filled the audience with amazement.
Her performance on stage left the audience in total amazement.
That sunset filled him with amazement.
The magician's tricks left the audience in complete amazement.
The verb for amazement is amaze.Amazes, amazing and amazed are also some verbs, depending on tense.
The noun amazement and the verb to amaze have the adjective forms amazing or amazed. These are the present and past participles of the verb.
No, it is a noun (astonishment). It is related to the adjective amazing, from the verb "to amaze."
The noun forms for the verb to amaze are amazement and the gerund, amazing. A related noun form is amazedness.
No, the word 'amaze' is a verb (amaze, amazes, amazing, amazed); to affect with great wonder; to astonish; to bewilder; to perplex; to surprise greatly. The noun forms for the verb to amaze are amazement and the gerund, amazing.
"Astonish" is a verb. It is used to describe the action of causing someone to feel sudden wonder or amazement.
The word amaze is a verb (amaze, amazes, amazing, amazed), to surprise or astonish greatly; to fill with wonder. The noun form for the verb to amaze is amazement and the gerund, amazing.
That is the correct spelling of the verb. To stupefy is to render someone speechless or unable to respond, through shock, surprise, or amazement.
No, "wonder" is not a conjunction. It is typically used as a noun or verb to denote curiosity, amazement, or awe.
The verb "gape" means to look or stare with a look of wonder, amazement or surprise, generally with one's mouth open. It can also mean to open one's mouth wide.
"he looked at me in amazement"
"Arnold!" she gasped in amazement, "How did you know that?"