"I was mortified to find out that my mother was in a car crash."
I am not exaggerating one bit when I say that I was just mortified.
I was mortified when my mother got up to sing karaoke.
I was mortified by the very thought of crossing over the chasm via that shaky, antiquated footbridge.
i was mortified when i saw the dead bird laying on the floor!
mortifiedis an adjective so u need to use it for describing something
Mortify means to "humilate or embarrass." The part of speech is a verb.For example: Jane was mortified when she had a rip in her pants.i was totally mortified when my mom told me that i was ugly!!
'He was mortified when his father set eyes on his poor report card.' You use it when you are really embarrassed like (example): I was mortified when someone pulled my pants down at the school assembly. I hope I helped. You use it when you are really embarrassed like (example): I was mortified when someone pulled my pants down at the school assembly. I hope I helped.
We frenetically ran out of the event and spent the next few weeks mortified, in self-inflicted social exile.
It is the adverb for doleful, but I do not think you should use it in a sentence
It depends on the foreign word.
The word "stakeholder" should not be capitalized unless it is used at the beginning of a sentence or in a title.
No, a comma is not needed before and after the word "again" if it is in the middle of a sentence.