interesting, abusive, come from the latin word apwallinn
* Bad, unpleasant, appalling, disagreeable, dreadful * Terrible, horrendous, horrific, appalling
"The truth about his infidelity was an appalling shock to his family."
The behavior of the fourth period class was appalling on Friday.
"horrible" "terrible" "awful" "appalling" "dreadful "horrifying" "horrific"
The taste of the pie was appalling, i was very disgusted.
The definition of the word appalling is "awful; terrible."
The smell coming from the dumpster was appalling.
The word appalling is not a sound, but it is an adjective. To find something appalling is to find it both shocking and disgusting.
"The skunk smell was appalling to her sensitive nose."
the prefix un would make it unappalling and that is the only one. [the word unappalling -not appalling; not shocking suprising]
The lack of scientific understanding by most non-scientists is appalling to most scientists.
* Bad, unpleasant, appalling, disagreeable, dreadful * Terrible, horrendous, horrific, appalling
"The truth about his infidelity was an appalling shock to his family."
She was appalled at the children's behavior.
The word 'appall' is a verb, not a noun (appall, appalls, appalling, appalled).The abstract noun form of the verb to appall is the gerund, appalling.
Appalled means horrified, or shocked. It comes from the Old French word 'apalir' - to grow pale. Shock sometimes makes us grow pale.
The behavior of the fourth period class was appalling on Friday.