DISAPPOINTED Synonyms Antonyms - 52 words | Thesaurus. com 名人名言佳句


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  • We are disappointed of someone disappointed from someone . . .
    Of the list you provide, "in" is the most idiomatic, but there's also "disappointed by ", "disappointed with ", and "disappointed at " a person or persons You can, apparently, be "disappointed of " some expected result, which can include the actions of some person However, to me this sounds formal and somewhat archaic, and I would never use use it As far as I know, "disappointed from " is
  • grammar - Is it disappointed with, in, or by? - English Language . . .
    The difference between "in", "by", and "with" in this context actually depends on the nature or type of disappointment you feel: "Disappointed with" implies that the cause of the disappointment was something basic about the nature or attributes of the thing: I was disappointed with my new toaster It really didn't toast the bread as well as I hoped The "with" form is usually used with
  • prepositions - Disappointment at or disappointment in - English . . .
    Both "disappointed in" and "disappointed at" are idiomatic in American English In general in American English, people tend to use "disappointed in" with reference to a specific person or group of people
  • prepositions - disappointed in at the fact that - English Language . . .
    disappointed with by: Fairly generic ways of saying something disappointed you With may emphasize that you consciously evaluated something and determined it was disappointing, rather than having the disappointment directly triggered in you by something external
  • Usage of I am agreeably disappointed in - English Language Learners . . .
    But disappointed could refer to an experience that simply ran counter to expectation, and there need not be any tinge of dejection about it, certainly if what was expected was not hoped for I think the lawyer is playing with the word as he is aware of the colloquial and non-collloquial usages
  • word usage - lt;Hopeless gt;, lt;Discouraged gt; and lt;Disappointed gt; - English . . .
    Both Don't be discouraged and Don't be disappointed are perfectly natural things to say, and in many contexts they'll effectively mean the same thing - speaker is advising someone to look on the bright side (to find good things in a bad situation) As OP has discovered, the dictionary definitions are somewhat different, but they're obviously closely related A "defeatist" reaction to finding
  • [They] went away disappointed disappointedly – Does went away . . .
    1 "Disappointed" is an adjective, and would describe their mood as they went away Their mood and their departure would be unconnected, and their disappointment may well carry on after they finish their journey away "Disappointedly" is an adverb, so it describes the manner of the other verb - in this case, the way in which they 'went away'
  • Is it correct to say, That was a little disappointment for me. ?
    Yes, you can say that It's a little more poetic than the more straightforward "That was a little disappointing for me", treating disappointment as if it's an object you can have rather than a general emotional state, but it's not at all uncommon to phrase it that way
  • So that and Such was - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Such here can also mean so great And we have the structure: So + adjective + be + noun + that clause So we have an answer to your transformation questions Such (= So great) was Mary's disappointment that she could not keep working Such (= So great) was the children's excitement that they talked about the show all night long
  • I expect Jay will come, so Ill be disappointed if he does will not
    Will is used in an "if" clause only if there is a special sense: either be willing to, or insist on (the latter generally with a connotation of annoyance in the speaker) So I'll be disappointed if he won't means something more than "if it happens that he doesn't": it implies something like "if he refuses to"


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