No, the word 'thrilled' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to thrill. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective.
The word thrill is a noun as a word for the source or cause of excitement or emotion; a word for an emotion.
The noun forms of the verb to thrill are thriller and the gerund, thrilling.
The word 'thrill' is both a noun (thrill, thrills) and a verb (thrill, thrills, thrilling, thrilled).The noun forms of the verb 'to thrill' are thriller and the gerund, thrilling.
Thrilled usually means delighted.
i am thrilled
yes unhappy is the opposite of thrilled.
Excited
The word 'thrill' is both a noun (thrill, thrills) and a verb (thrill, thrills, thrilling, thrilled).The noun forms of the verb 'to thrill' are thriller and the gerund, thrilling.
No. Thrill can be a verb (to excite or delight) or a noun (a thrilling feeling). It is a noun adjunct in terms such as thrill seekers and thrill rides. The participles of the verb (thrilled, thrilling) can be used as adjectives.
Thrilled usually means delighted.
i am thrilled
thrilled
The animals were thrilled
The fans were thrilled by the team's magnificent performance.
yes unhappy is the opposite of thrilled.
Thrilled to Death - 1989 is rated/received certificates of: USA:R
No
thrilled
Yes