Yes
-adjective1.depressed or discouraged by the failure of one's hopes or expectations: a disappointed suitor.
2.Obsolete . inadequately appointed; ill-equipped.
No. It is a noun.
The adjective dejected means unhappy, disappointed, or depressed because of failure or an undesirable outcome.
Yes it is. As in, "You disappoint me when you don't take out the trash".
Disappointment is a noun; you may also see it as an adjective: disappointed. It describes an emotion of sadness, but it is a special kind of sadness-- it refers to when you have expected something good to happen, but instead, the good thing does not happen. Here is an example of both words: He thought he would be invited to the party, and was very disappointed when he did not get an invitation. It may seem silly to be upset about a party, but his feeling of disappointment was very real to him because all of his friends were invited and he was not.
The word 'disappointed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to disappoint.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective used to describe a noun.The abstract noun forms for the verb to disappoint are disappointment and the gerund, disappointing.
more disappointed
Disappointed is typically an adjective, but it can also be used as a verb.
The verb disappoint has the participle adjectives disappointing (disappointing news) and disappointed(disappointed fans). The present participle (disappointing) is also used as a noun. It does not seem to work as an adjective for "people who disappoint."
The adjective dejected means unhappy, disappointed, or depressed because of failure or an undesirable outcome.
No, the word 'merely' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Example:He wasn't mad, he was merely disappointed.
Yes it is. As in, "You disappoint me when you don't take out the trash".
Disappointment is a noun; you may also see it as an adjective: disappointed. It describes an emotion of sadness, but it is a special kind of sadness-- it refers to when you have expected something good to happen, but instead, the good thing does not happen. Here is an example of both words: He thought he would be invited to the party, and was very disappointed when he did not get an invitation. It may seem silly to be upset about a party, but his feeling of disappointment was very real to him because all of his friends were invited and he was not.
The word 'disappointed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to disappoint.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective used to describe a noun.The abstract noun forms for the verb to disappoint are disappointment and the gerund, disappointing.
The person was very disappointed when he did not get the lottery. It is an example sentence for disappointed.
more disappointed
She felt disappointed when she didn't receive the promotion she had been working hard for.
The Yiddish word for disappointed is "Ahntoisht".
Disappointed was created on 1992-06-22.