The verbs of disbelief are disbelieve, disbelieves, disbelieving and disbelieved. It depends on the tense.
Some example sentences for you are:
"I disbelieve her now".
"She disbelieves my story".
"That sounds very disbelieving".
"I disbelieved him when I found out he was lying".
No, shock is not an adverb. Shock is typically a noun or a verb. It refers to a sudden and intense feeling or a state of emotional disbelief.
Examples of antonyms for the verb 'believe' are:denydisbelievediscarddismissdisputedisregardrefuserejectExample use:I don't believe in capital punishment. OR I rejectcapital punishment.
Aghast. Stunned by disbelief.
The Culture of Disbelief was created in 1994.
Disbelief. Disbelief: Adj. Lit., does not believe.
I was in disbelief when I found out my dog ran away
I look at the kids in disbelief for their terrible behavior.
Unbelief is the absence of belief, a passive activity, and disbelief is the active opposition to belief.
No. Disbelief is a noun. One adverb form could be "disbelievingly."
As an adjective: She walked into her birthday party in utter surprise. As a verb: When your father comes in, don't utter a word about the dent in the fender.
She looked in disbelief at the driver who was yelling obscenities.
The root word is belief.