AMAZE


Meaning of AMAZE in English

a ‧ maze /əˈmeɪz/ BrE AmE verb [transitive]

[ Word Family: adjective : ↑ amazed , ↑ amazing ; verb : ↑ amaze ; noun : ↑ amazement ; adverb : ↑ amazingly ]

[ Language: Old English ; Origin: amasian , from an unrecorded masian 'to confuse' ]

to surprise someone very much SYN astonish :

Dave amazed his friends by suddenly getting married.

it amazes somebody how/what etc

It still amazes me how much she has improved.

amaze that

It never ceased to amaze him that women were attracted to Sam.

• • •

THESAURUS

▪ surprise to make someone feel surprised, especially because they did not expect something:

Her reaction surprised me – I didn’t realize how strongly she felt.

|

What surprised me was how cheap everything was compared to at home.

▪ amaze to greatly surprise someone, for example because something is very good, unusual, or hard to believe:

He amazed everyone with his skill.

|

It amazes me that no one has thought of the idea before.

▪ astonish to greatly surprise someone:

Myra astonished her doctors by recovering so quickly.

▪ astound to greatly surprise or shock someone. Astound sounds a little more formal and a little stronger than astonish :

What astounded him was their inefficiency.

▪ take somebody by surprise to happen at an unexpected time, so that people are surprised or unprepared:

Security men were taken by surprise as the man ran onto the stage.

|

His resignation took us by surprise.

▪ startle to make someone feel surprised or slightly frightened by doing something they did not expect:

The wind made the door shut with a crash, which startled her.

|

Sudden movements may startle the horse.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.