. Ashamed, humiliated, mortified refer to a condition or feeling of discomfort or embarrassment. Ashamed focuses on the sense of one's own responsibility for an act, whether it is foolish, improper, or immoral: He was ashamed of his dishonesty. She was ashamed of her mistake. Humiliated stresses a feeling of being humbled or disgraced, without any necessary implication of guilt: He was humiliated by the king. Both words are used equally in situations in which one is felt to be responsible for the actions of another: Robert felt humiliated by his daughter's behavior. Mom was ashamed of the way I looked. Mortified represents an intensification of the feelings implied by the other two words: She was mortified by her clumsiness.
The abstract noun form for the adjective 'ashamed' is 'ashamedness'.
The word 'ashamed' is the adjective form for the abstract noun 'shame'.
The word ashamed is an adjective to mean feeling shame.
It is also the past tense of the verb to ashame.
shyest shyful
ED "e and d" ed
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