No, it is a noun (astonishment). It is related to the adjective amazing, from the verb "to amaze."
To amaze means to fill with great awe; or to surprise greatly. It is a verb from the English language. An example would be: "Adam amazed the world with his great skill."
2
Amazing
There is no adverb for amazement. The closest adverb would be "amazingly".
The verb for amazed is amaze. As in the action "to amaze someone".
The word amaze is a verb (amaze, amazes, amazing, amazed), to surprise or astonish greatly; to fill with wonder. The noun form for the verb to amaze is amazement and the gerund, amazing.
Adjective.
Amaze is the verb form. The present tense is amaze/amazes; the past tense is amazed. Amazed and amazing are the participle forms.
It can be. Amazing is usually an adjective but can also be a form of the verb to amaze.
No, it is a noun (astonishment). It is related to the adjective amazing, from the verb "to amaze."
No, the word 'amaze' is a verb (amaze, amazes, amazing, amazed); to affect with great wonder; to astonish; to bewilder; to perplex; to surprise greatly. The noun forms for the verb to amaze are amazement and the gerund, amazing.
The abstract noun forms for the verb 'to amaze' are amazedness, amazement, and the gerund, amazing.
The noun amazement and the verb to amaze have the adjective forms amazing or amazed. These are the present and past participles of the verb.
Amazing is not a prefix. It is simply an adjective or a verb (amaze) with an -ing suffix.
The noun forms for the verb to amaze are amazement and the gerund, amazing. A related noun form is amazedness.
The word amazed is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to amaze'. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples: verb: We were amazed that everyone survived the crash. adjective: The amazed class listened intently to the story of Ernest Shackleton. The noun forms for the verb to amaze are amazement and the gerund, amazing.