To her great surprise, she won the first prize in the competition. They announced the promotion to her great surprise during the meeting. To her great surprise, the mysterious letter turned out to be from her long-lost friend.
The Hawaiian word for surprise is "kupanaha."
The sentence "Her son, to her great surprise, made the Dean's List" shows the best use of the phrase "to her great surprise." Placing the phrase before the action helps to clearly convey the unexpected nature of the event.
There are a few ways you could correctly punctuate this sentence. "Wow! What a great surprise.", shouted Ernesto. "Wow, what a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto. "Wow! What a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto.
There are three vowels in the word surprise... In order, they are... u - i - e
The revelation that he was the winner was greeted with great surprise.
What a great surprise!
To her great surprise, she won the first prize in the competition. They announced the promotion to her great surprise during the meeting. To her great surprise, the mysterious letter turned out to be from her long-lost friend.
The word "stupefied" means "redered semi-conscious" by drugs, a blow on the head, etc. Yes, it's related to the word "stupid". "Astonishment" means "great surprise". In this case the surprise was so great that he was stupefied, or rendered semi-conscious, by it.
It's the same word, but pronounced differently. A surprise in French is "une surprise" (sur-PREEZ).
Yes, the word 'amazement' is a noun, a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for a feeling of great surprise or wonder; astonishment; a word for an emotion.
There are a few ways you could correctly punctuate this sentence. "Wow! What a great surprise.", shouted Ernesto. "Wow, what a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto. "Wow! What a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto.
The African Luhya equivalent for the English word 'surprise' is "okhwisundukhaa".
The Hawaiian word for surprise is "kupanaha."
its a surprise word because cause is make a friend you are surprised
"Wow, what a great surprise!" shouted Ernesto.
The word 'surprise' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'surprise' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for something sudden or unexpected; a word for a concept.The noun form of the verb to surprise is the gerund, surprising.