| appall | (vt) ทำให้กลัว, See also: ทำให้ตกใจ, Syn. dismay, shock, appall |
**ระวัง คำแปลอาจมีข้อผิดพลาด**
| appall |
| Appall | v. i. |
| Appall | n. Terror; dismay. [ Poet. ] Cowper. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Appall | v. t. The answer that ye made to me, my dear, . . . Wine, of its own nature, will not congeal and freeze, only it will lose the strength, and become appalled in extremity of cold. Holland. [ 1913 Webster ] The house of peers was somewhat appalled at this alarum. Clarendon. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| appalled | adj. |
| Appalling | a. Such as to appall; |
| Appallment | n. Depression occasioned by terror; dismay. [ Obs. ] Bacon. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| appalling | (n) an experience that appalls, Example: is it better to view the appalling or merely hear of it? |
| appalling | (adj) causing consternation, Syn. dismaying, Example: appalling conditions |
| appallingly | (adv) to an appalling extent, Example: the prisoners were appallingly thin |
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