Yes, appalled is a verb. It's the past tense and past participle of appall. Appalled can also be used as an adjective.
The horror movie appalled me.I was appalled (shocked or horrified) when my sister drew on my book report with a permanent marker.I was appalled by the scene of the train wreck.
Appalled is the correct spelling for the word meaning horrified.
To make me feel appalled you would have to do something really stupid and dangerous. or She had an appalled face as she watched the play because of the horrible singing from the actors.
They were out raged and appalled by the outcome. After this, they started groups like KKK killing the freed slaves and succeeded from the north.
No, was is a verb (past tense, along with were, of the verb to be).
The word appalling is an adjective. It can also be a verb where it is the present participle of the verb to appall.
Verb
No, the word 'appall' is a verb (appall, appalls, appalling, appalled): to greatly dismay or horrify.
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.
The horror movie appalled me.I was appalled (shocked or horrified) when my sister drew on my book report with a permanent marker.I was appalled by the scene of the train wreck.
The suffix for "appalled" is "-ed."
i am Appalled at how you dont know the answer
John was appalled by Susie's behavior.
So Appalled was created in 2010.
The teacher was just appalled.
"Appall" is a verb. It means to shock or greatly dismay someone. For example, you might say, "The news of the disaster appalled the entire community." The noun form is "appallment," but the term is less commonly used.
Appalled does not mean delighted. It means horrified, shocked, or dismayed.