different between terrorized vs tremulous

terrorized

English

Verb

terrorized

  1. simple past tense and past participle of terrorize

terrorized From the web:

  • what terrorized lanyon to the point of death
  • terrorized what does it mean
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tremulous

English

Etymology

From Latin tremulus, from trem? (I shake). Cognate to Ancient Greek ????? (trém?).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t??mjul?s/

Adjective

tremulous (comparative more tremulous, superlative most tremulous)

  1. Trembling, quivering, or shaking.
  2. Timid, hesitant; lacking confidence.
    • 2009 Oct. 7, Christopher Kimball, "Opinion: Gourmet to All That," New York Times (retrieved 18 Aug 2012):
      This, hard on the heels of the death of Julia Child in 2004, makes one tremulous about the future.

Synonyms

  • (trembling, quivering, or shaking): quaking, shaking, trembling, tremulant
  • (timid, hesitant, or unconfident): timid, wavering

Related terms

  • tremble
  • tremor

Translations

tremulous From the web:

  • what's tremulous mean
  • what tremulous sentence
  • what does tremulous white mean
  • what causes tremulousness
  • what is tremulous speech
  • what does tremulous mean in reading
  • what does tremulous mean definition
  • what does tremulous mean in spanish
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