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Awed   /ɔd/   Listen
Awed

adjective
1.
Inspired by a feeling of fearful wonderment or reverence.  Synonym: awful.  "Awful worshippers with bowed heads"
2.
Having or showing a feeling of mixed reverence and respect and wonder and dread.  Synonyms: awestricken, awestruck.  "In grim despair and awestruck wonder"



Awe

verb
(past & past part. awed; pres. part. awing)
1.
Inspire awe in.



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"Awed" Quotes from Famous Books



... band and saw some "Milingtary," as he called them, approaching. The sight of the soldiers with their guns awed him, yet he followed the procession to a grove, where there was more music and also speechmaking. He listened to the orations with wide-open mouth, until he suddenly lost interest when a bit of banana skin was thrown at him, landing directly ...
— Randy of the River - The Adventures of a Young Deckhand • Horatio Alger Jr.

... House sat in paralytic astonishment. Then came an awed whisper from a Republican: "Has the old fool really found ...
— In the Arena - Stories of Political Life • Booth Tarkington

... young women, who make themselves conspicuous at the afternoon promenade in the Bois de Boulogne; and he found himself in the presence of an evidently cultivated and imperious woman, who, even in her degradation, retained all her pride of race, and awed him, despite all his coolness and assurance. "I do, indeed, madame, wish to confer with you respecting some ...
— The Count's Millions - Volume 1 (of 2) • Emile Gaboriau

... grandeur of the central figure in the book. Carlyle mixed with all sorts and conditions of men and women, from the peasants of Annandale to the best intellectual society of London. He was always, or almost always, the first man in the company, not elated, nor over-awed," standing on the adamantine basis of his manhood, casting aside all props and shoars." From snobbishness, the corroding vice of English society, he was, though he once jocularly charged himself with it, entirely free. He judged individuals on their merits ...
— The Life of Froude • Herbert Paul

... his faith, and on the faces of all was the expression of a deep pity and concern. Their own adventure, in the light of his grief and bitterness of spirit, seemed selfish and little, and they stood motionless, in an awed and sorrowful silence. ...
— The King's Jackal • Richard Harding Davis


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