I was aghast at his suggestion of committing a violent robbery.
The prim teacher was justifiably aghast.
Aghast is a word used to describe someone who is filled with shock or horror. A good sentence would be, when the man jumped out from behind the bush she was aghast.
aghast ?? He stood aghast at the sight of the pool of blood. Everyone was aghast at the verdict. His parents were completely aghast at his failure.
She stood aghast as her home for her entire life burned to the ground.
(Aghast - filled with amazement, disgust, fear, or terror.)"People were aghast at the senseless brutality of the crime.""Looking over his living room, he was aghast at the mess made by his dog.""The landlord was aghast at the water bill run up by his new tenant."
That is "AGHAST"
'Aghast' is not a verb, so there is no past tense, but you could say something like:She was aghast.
"She stood aghast at the sight of the terrible crash." "Maria was aghast when she found her dog eating the chocolate bar." "I was aghast when I received an F on my Grammar test."
(Gastness is an obsolete term meaning extreme fear or terror - it is from the same Middle English root, gasten, as the modern adjective aghast.)Example:The population was thrown into a state of gastness by the series of gruesome murders.(i.e. they were aghast)
Scared to death
astonishing type scardness
struck by shock. terror or amazement.