It is doubly excited if it is sparately excited dc motor, singly excited if it is self excited machine
No. You can be excited about, or excited at, but not excited in. For example, you are excited about the opportunity of joining....
"Both them and us were excited" is not correct usage. Look at how the pronouns would be used separately, then combine them in one, correct sentence. You would say "They were excited" not "Them were excited." Similarly, you would say "We were excited," not "Us were excited." The correct combination would be: "We and they were excited."
Be Excited was created in 2007.
The adjective for excited is exciting. Example: That was an exciting movie!
"displeased" ... and "unexcited"; "semi-excited" These are the first submissions concerning "excited".
ExciteTo stir up strong feeling, action or emotionTo stimulate the emotions ofTo bring about; To induceStimulated to activity; briskExcited - Eager, Active, enthusiastic
Excited as a squirrel on a trampoline
the antonym for excited is unagitated or unreactive
Just "excited".
most excited
In this example, "excited" is an adjective. It is a predicate adjective, because it follows the linking verb "are". An example of using "excited" as a verb is, "His arrival excited the dogs, and they began to bark."