thrilled
Yes, it is a form of the verb "to thrill" (to excite). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb, and may also be used as an adjective (thrilled moviegoers)
the strong verb for smile and cry is thrilled as you can be so thrilled about something that you cry but you are happy and smiling at the same time
past tense
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.
No, it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb, to thrill. It can be used as an adjective.
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.
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.
The baby will the verb.
noYes - sounds can be used as a linking verb.The violin sounds terrible
linking
A transitive verb is an action verb that has an object that receives the action. In this case, the object CD player does not receive the action sounds, so the verb is intransitive.
The word "sounds" can be a verb (present tense of "sound") or a noun (referring to noises or auditory sensations).