Olympian
Senior Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2008
- Member Type
- Interested in Language
- Native Language
- Hindi
- Home Country
- India
- Current Location
- India
Hello,
This is with reference to the Occupy Wallstreet protesters in New York being evicted from the park they were occupying.
After the police cleared the park and it was cleaned, demonstrators were allowed to return but were banned from setting up camp again. Numbers dwindled to less than two dozen overnight on Wednesday.
"I was dismayed by the number of people who stayed," said Sam DeLily, 23, from the New York borough of Queens. "I was disappointed that more people didn't realize we'd need a show of support last night more than ever."
Can 'amazed' and 'dismayed' be used interchangeably? I know 'amazed' is generally used to mean 'surprised' or 'astonished', and 'dismayed' is used slightly in a negative sense, to mean 'appalled' or 'disheartened', but 'amazed' and 'dismayed' are also indicated as synonyms. That is why I am asking these questions.
1. Can 'dismayed' be replaced with 'amazed' without changing the meaning since the next sentence (I was disappointed that ..) clarifies the meaning?
2. Without the follow-up sentence (beginning with 'I was disappointed that ..'), if 'dismayed' is replaced with 'amazed', would it then mean that Sam was surprised that so many people stayed (rather than so few).
Thank you
This is with reference to the Occupy Wallstreet protesters in New York being evicted from the park they were occupying.
After the police cleared the park and it was cleaned, demonstrators were allowed to return but were banned from setting up camp again. Numbers dwindled to less than two dozen overnight on Wednesday.
"I was dismayed by the number of people who stayed," said Sam DeLily, 23, from the New York borough of Queens. "I was disappointed that more people didn't realize we'd need a show of support last night more than ever."
Can 'amazed' and 'dismayed' be used interchangeably? I know 'amazed' is generally used to mean 'surprised' or 'astonished', and 'dismayed' is used slightly in a negative sense, to mean 'appalled' or 'disheartened', but 'amazed' and 'dismayed' are also indicated as synonyms. That is why I am asking these questions.
1. Can 'dismayed' be replaced with 'amazed' without changing the meaning since the next sentence (I was disappointed that ..) clarifies the meaning?
2. Without the follow-up sentence (beginning with 'I was disappointed that ..'), if 'dismayed' is replaced with 'amazed', would it then mean that Sam was surprised that so many people stayed (rather than so few).
Thank you
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