The verb of impression is impress. Other verbs depending on tense are impresses, impressing and impressed.
I shall put those into example sentences for you:
"He tried to impress her".
"She impresses him all the time".
"My son is always impressing us".
"I am very proud and impressed with my daughter".
No, the word 'impressed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to impress'. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples:We were impressed by the amount of research in the report. (verb)The impressed audience applauded wildly. (adjective)The word 'impress' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'impress' is word for a mark made by pressure; a word for a thing.Example: I want an impress of my initials on the envelope flaps.
It can be. (Impressed observers, impressed seamen)It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to impress, and may be a verb form or an adjective.
The word illuminated is an adjective (or the past tense of the verb 'to illuminate'). The noun form is illumination. Example uses: As an adjective: The illuminated building look very impressive. As a verb: We illuminated the stage in blue lights. The noun: We adjusted the illumination to highlight the faces of the children.
impressive means good
Unimpressive, ordinary, mediocre are some antonyms for impressive
"Impresionar" is the Spanish verb "to impress". "Impresionado" is the form of this verb that corresponds to "impressed".
No, the word 'impressed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to impress'. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples:We were impressed by the amount of research in the report. (verb)The impressed audience applauded wildly. (adjective)The word 'impress' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'impress' is word for a mark made by pressure; a word for a thing.Example: I want an impress of my initials on the envelope flaps.
The verb of little is belittle. As in "to belittle something or someone".
It can be. (Impressed observers, impressed seamen)It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to impress, and may be a verb form or an adjective.
The word 'impress' is not an adjective. The word 'impress' is a verb and a noun.The noun 'impress' is a concrete noun as a word for a mark made by pressure.The abstract noun form of the verb to impress is impression as a word for an effect, feeling, or image retained as a consequence of experience.The noun impression is also a concrete noun as a word for a physical mark left by one object exerting pressure on another.
The word illuminated is an adjective (or the past tense of the verb 'to illuminate'). The noun form is illumination. Example uses: As an adjective: The illuminated building look very impressive. As a verb: We illuminated the stage in blue lights. The noun: We adjusted the illumination to highlight the faces of the children.
verb- to regard or portray as less impressive or important than appearances indicate; depreciate; disparage. Synonyms:minimize, decry, deprecate, deride, scorn, dismiss.
The book was very impressive, I recommend it.That was an impressive firework display.You need to be really impressive to catch my attention.
The positive form of "least impressive" is "impressive." While "least impressive" indicates a lack of noteworthy qualities, "impressive" suggests that something has qualities that are striking or admirable.
impressive means good
The cast of Very Impressive - 2013 includes: Cheryl Greer as Cheryl Very Greer Impressive as Very Impressive
I will assume you are asking about Impressive the Quarter Horse. Impressive was 15.1 hands high.