amazed

adjective24 collocationsAvg. frequency: 7.0

A common and strong way to express being very amazed.

Used to strongly emphasize the feeling of amazement.

Used to strongly emphasize the feeling of amazement.

Used to strongly emphasize the feeling of amazement.

Used to mean 'very' or 'to a significant degree' amazed.

Used to simply and strongly express amazement.

To continue to be in a state of amazement after some time has passed.

To feel amazement every time something happens.

Emphasizes the genuineness and depth of the amazement.

To feel amazement continuously or very frequently.

Used to express sincere and authentic amazement.

To feel amazement repeatedly over a period of time.

A strong, often literary, way to say 'completely amazed'.

Informal way to say 'quite amazed', especially in American English.

A common pairing to describe a mixed feeling of shock and great surprise.

A strong, emphatic way to say one is always amazed by something.

Expresses an ongoing state of amazement over time.

Used to express the state of being amazed.

To have an expression of amazement on one's face.

To give the impression of being amazed.

To sound as if one is amazed, based on their voice.

To be so amazed that one stands still, often in a literary or dramatic context.

Used to specify the cause of amazement, often an event, action, or fact.

Used to specify the cause of amazement, often a quality or the agent performing an action.