terrifying is not a verb.... it is an adjective. to terrify someone is a verb and that is used instead of the adjective.
happy to help
The word 'terrifying' is a gerund, the present participle of a verb that functions as a noun.examplesIt was terrifying to stand up and give my speech. (verb)Terrifying his sister is his favorite pastime. (noun, subject of the sentence)The noun related to the verb to terrify is terror.
The word 'terrifying' is the present participle of the verb to terrify. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective and a verbal noun called a gerund.Example use as a noun:The terrifying and the gory are his favorite types of movies.The related noun is "terror"
TerrorizeVerb: Create and maintain a state of extreme fear and distress in (someone); fill with terror: "he used his army to terrorize the population".to terrorize (or terrorise)
more frightened, most frightened
more terrifying
"Terrifying" is an adjective.
Yes. The word terrified is the past participle of the verb to terrify (terrifies, terrifying, terrified). A past participle verb is also an adjective, for example, terrified onlookers or terrified rabbit, etc.
The huge grizzly bear was terrifying
The word terrified is the past participle of the verb to terrify; a past participle verb is also an adjective. For example: Verb: The magician's buzz saw act terrified the children in the audience. Adjective: The terrified passengers were so grateful when the plane touched down safely.
The answer is easy- The movie was a terrifying one.
"Terrified" is the past participle of the verb "to terrify". It can be used to make the perfect aspect - he has terrified many people in his life - or to modify nouns, like an adjective - he is terrified, the terrified man.
What is the comparative and superlative for terrifying