The verb form is enthuse.
Enthuse is the verb form of enthusiasm.
That is the correct spelling of "enthusiasm" (excited interest).
There is no concrete noun form for the verb 'enthuse'.The noun form of the verb to enthuse is enthusiasm, an abstract noun; a word for a strong feeling of active interest in something; a word for an emotion.
Enthusiasm is a noun. e.g. She was filled with enthusiasm.
The abstract noun related to the adjective enthusiastic is is enthusiasm.
The word 'enthusiasm' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for strong excitement and active interest; a word for a feeling.
There is no verb form of the word.The form ebullient is an adjective meaning cheerfully enthusiastic or excited.The form ebullience is a noun meaning zealous enthusiasm.
No, the word enthusiasm is a state of being. If it were in its form, enthusiastically, it would be an adverb.
a verb form is dignify
No
The root word is the Greek word theos (god), which became the noun enthusiasm and the adjective enthusiastic(entheos, "having a god within"). The formation of the shorter verb form "to enthuse" is a 19th Century Americanism.The word uses the adjective form of enthusiasm -asticconnected by al to the adverb suffix -ly (in that manner), and the negative prefix un- (not).Un-enthusiastic-al-ly : in a manner which suggests the person is not acting with enthusiasm, half-heartedly.
The closest adverb form of the word "enthusiasm" is enthusiastically.An example sentence is: "he enthusiasticallyvolunteers for the project".