Bewilder first attested in the 1680s, from be- "thoroughly affected" + (archaic) wilder "lead astray, lure into the wilds," probably a back-formation of wild(erness). An earlier word with the same sense was bewhape (early 14th. century). Suffix 'ment' as 'state of being'.
The word origin of bewilder shows us that the prefix "be-" (thoroughly) was added to the word "wilder" (to lead or go astray). Wilder is not a word that we currently use, but you could probably still call "be" a prefix.
The look of bewilderment on his face was priceless!
You could use bewilderment in a sentence such as: "David's bewilderment grew stronger the farther he went into the forest."
The word "bewilderment" is not found in the text of Charlotte's Web by E.B. White. The story focuses on themes like friendship, loyalty, and acceptance rather than bewilderment.
Yes, the word bewilderment is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a state of confusion resulting from failure to understand; a word for a thing.
A good word to describe shock is "bewilderment."
Bewilderment is a noun.
Turmoil is a word for being in a state of confusion, bewilderment and agitation.
The likely word is confusion (bewilderment, disorientation, state of disorganization).
A sentence with bewilderment in it is used like this for example I was very bewilderment because i could not figure out my friends problen
Bewilderment
"Coffusion" is gibberish. -Confusion is the nearest possible word, it means bewilderment, perplexity or lack of clarity