He claims to be a "brand new man" after completing the treatment program, but his family is pretty skeptical.
The ad for the diet pills says that you can loose 10 pounds in two days, but I'm extremely skeptical about that claim.
I stated skeptically that the car will not run.
His skeptical look spoke volumes.
I can give you a sentence using the word galaxy.
"Skeptically" said Miss Jones, our English teacher, is not the correct spelling of a word which means 'in a doubting manner', but can be used to describe someone who is generally sceptical about the paranormal, occult, or other yet-to-be-proved mysteries.
The word vane could be in a sentence like, "i have a big vane"
The nouns in the sentence are:sky, the subject of the sentence (a word for a thing);blue, a predicate nominative (a word for a thing).
The teacher was skeptical that I could spell the word or use it in a sentence. Skeptical, I had to see the outcome myself to believe it was true.
It's SKEPTICAL. Here are some sentences.I'm skeptical about your ability to use the spell-check program.He gave me a skeptical glance.She has a skeptical attitude toward everything.
His skeptical look spoke volumes.
There is no prefix in the word skeptical. -ical is the suffix in the word.
"The people were skeptical when the scientist told them that his son was taken by extraterrestrials."
She was a skeptic when it came to playing the lottery; she didn't think she had a chance. When Mr. Valle sees a sentence with college level vocabulary, he is skeptical that it was created by a sophomore in high school.
The word suspicions is a noun. It is the plural term of suspicion.
Skeptical .
"Just then, when the crowd got skeptical, the white beautiful dove flew right out of the Master of Magic's black hat."
The people were skeptic about aliens and UFO's because they don't believe in them.
It's not surprising that Billy's teacher is skeptical after he told her his dog ate his homework. - adjective, modifies the noun "teacher" In fact, she viewed his excuse very skeptically. - adverb, modifies the verb "viewed"
Synonyms can include skeptical, disbelieving, or unconvinced.A really great, old word is 'pish-posh', which indicates disbelief or dismissal.