There is no adverb for amazement. The closest adverb would be "amazingly".
Amazingly.
Amazingly
Yes, it is. It is the adverb form of the adjective amazing (present participle of to amaze).
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yes it is a verb
Amazing
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."
Yes, it is. It is the adverb form of the adjective amazing (present participle of to amaze).
The past tense of amaze is amazed.
Amaze Your Friends was created in 1998.
Amaze Me was created on 2007-10-19.
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.
The verb for amazed is amaze. As in the action "to amaze someone".
Amaze Your Friends has 250 pages.
The root of amaze is maze, first attest in English circa 1300, meaning "delusion, bewilderment," possibly from Old English m(ae)s. The prefix 'a' in this case is an intensifying conditional, 'ing' is a gerunditive adjective terminal, and 'ly' converts the adjective to an adverb.
Never Ceases to Amaze Me was created in 1983.
Yes, the word "amaze" has a long A sound. It is pronounced as "uh-meyz."
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.
calm