Meaning of horrifyingly in English
in a very shocking way: The prediction of four million unemployed now looks horrifyingly realistic. The prospect of an attack seems horrifyingly real.horrify
| part of speech: | transitive verb |
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| inflections: | horrifies, horrifying, horrified |
| definition: | to cause feelings of horror in; frighten, shock, or appall. The grisly accident horrified the witnesses.The memories of what he'd seen in the war horrified him. similar words: appall, revolt |
verb (used with object), hor·ri·fied, hor·ri·fy·ing. to cause to feel horror; strike with horror: The accident horrified us all. to distress greatly; shock or dismay: She was horrified by the price of the house.
Horror is not an adjective. It is a noun. In the sentence "I saw a horror movie yesterday", it seems like an adjective, since it modifies "movie", but that's not what's actually happens. " Horror movie" is a compound noun. "
adjective. The definition of dull is someone who is stupid or boring or something that is not shiny or something that is not sharp. An example of dull is a book that is so boring you can't get past page ten.
Synonyms: horrified, horror-struck, horror-stricken.
To trot is move faster than walking, but not quite at a full-out run. You might trot down the street when you hear the ice cream truck coming. People can trot — as they do when they jog or do a slow run — and so can four-legged animals, especially horses.
trots. plural of trot. (plural only, slang) Diarrhoea/diarrhea. I've had the trots all morning and haven't been able to go out. (plural only, Australia, New Zealand, US, informal, with "the") A trotting race meet; harness racing.
The canter is a controlled, three-beat gait, while the gallop is a faster, four-beat variation of the same gait. It is a natural gait possessed by all horses, faster than most horses' trot, or ambling gaits. The gallop is the fastest gait of the horse, averaging about 40 to 48 kilometres per hour (25 to 30 mph).
verb (used without object), trot·ted, trot·ting.
(of a horse) to go at a gait between a walk and a run, in which the legs move in diagonal pairs, but not quite simultaneously, so that when the movement is slow one foot at least is always on the ground, and when fast all four feet are momentarily off the ground at once.To fetch something is to go and get it. "Go fetch!" you might shout after your dog while throwing a stick into the yard. Fetch comes from the Old English fatian meaning "grasp." When a dog fetches a bone, it grasps it in its mouth.
Definition of trot out. transitive verb. 1 : to lead out and show the paces of (a horse) 2 : to bring forward for display or use trotted out a new excuse.
Gallop. The four main canine gaits are the walk, the trot, the rotary canter and the rotary gallop. Dogs sometimes also use a classical canter and a classical gallop. The amble is a less preferred gait, best used when a trotting dog wants a break, and the pace is always abnormal.
TROT is a valid scrabble word.