No. Startle is a verb. The adverb form is "startlingly."
a flinch
Amaze, baffle, mislead, bewilder, startle.
Buzzed can mean a slang term for somebody who has had a little too much alcohol to drink. Another meaning for this word is in airplane flying. A plane might buzz the ground, for example, to startle somebody.
calm, comfort, compose, expect, put at ease
"Sorry, I didn't mean to startle you." "Nature watchers must be careful not to startle the wary animals."
How is it possible to startle a person so easily? It is really not nice to startle people.. Please stop trying to startle me... The whistle always seemed to startle me. This is how you use the word startle correctly
Both frighten and startle mean to scare Examples: When I am home alone, unfamiliar sounds startle me. When I am home alone, unfamiliar sounds frighten me.
No. Startle is a verb. The adverb form is "startlingly."
a flinch
Amaze, baffle, mislead, bewilder, startle.
There are two syllables. Star-tle.
Why do I startle easy?"
A startle is better than getting scared, since getting scared is a massive startle, but a startle is just a miniscule scare.
startle
startle
Buzzed can mean a slang term for somebody who has had a little too much alcohol to drink. Another meaning for this word is in airplane flying. A plane might buzz the ground, for example, to startle somebody.