[Vocabulary] 'amaze' vs 'dismay'

Status
Not open for further replies.

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
 
Last edited:
Can 'amazed' and 'dismayed' be used interchangeably?
No
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.
Where did you read this? It is not true.
5
 
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.
Where did you read this? It is not true.

5

Sorry, perhaps I read it wrong. Here, under 'amazed' it says that 'dismayed' is a 'related word', which is not synonym perhaps because there is a separate section for synonyms and 'dismayed' does not appear in it.

Here, it says, 'amaze' and 'dismay' are synonyms for 'appall'.


Thank you
 
A thesaurus is a good place to look for alternative words that might be suitable for your purposes, but you need to check in a good dictionary before you actually use one you find. There are very few exact synonyms in English, and 'amaze', 'dismay' and 'appall' are far from synonymous.
 
Thesauruses have their limitations- many clump words together too readily as synonyms- that list in the second list is a good example of this as it's dumping words together that are far from synonymous; they're strong feeling, but not all the same.
 
@5jj and @Tdol, Thank you. So thesauruses are useful for reminding of words that we already know well, not really for suggesting words that can be substituted for a given word. :)
 
@5jj and @Tdol, Thank you. So thesauruses are useful for reminding of words that we already know well, not really for suggesting words that can be substituted for a given word. :)
You can use a thesaurus for suggesting alternative words, but you have to know the meaning of the word you eventually use.
Some words in a list of synonyms can turn out to be near-antonyms if used in the wrong context.
 
You can use a thesaurus for suggesting alternative words, but you have to know the meaning of the word you eventually use.
Some words in a list of synonyms can turn out to be near-antonyms if used in the wrong context.

@Raymott, thank you. If you can think of an example, could you please give one?
 
@Raymott, thank you. If you can think of an example, could you please give one?
There's a ramshackle collection of 'synonyms' here: amazement - surprise, shock, stupefaction, incredulity, disbelief, speechlessness, awe, wonder, wonderment. Oxford Compact Thesaurus, (3rd ed.) 2005.

There would be quite a difference if you replaced 'amazement' in the following sentence with some of the words suggested:

When my boyfriend said that he wanted to become a priest, I gazed at him in amazement.

A devout church-goer, might gaze at her boyfriend in awe or wonderment.
A born-again atheist might gaze at him in shock, incredulity or disbelief.

The reactions would be rather different, and you would have to know the full context of situation before selecting your alternative.

 
@5jj, thank you. :up:
 
After an hour, I had a break from bricklaying.
Synonyms: break, crack, fracture, burst, split, splinter, shatter, smash
After an hour, I had a fracture from bricklaying.

You each take a third of the beer, and I’ll drink the rest.
Synonyms: rest - something left after other parts have been taken away; "there was no remainder"; "he threw away the rest"; "he took what he wanted and I got the balance"
remainder, residual, residuum, residue, balance
You each take a third of the beer and I’ll drink the residue.


Synonym lists from:
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/
 
After an hour, I had a break from bricklaying.
Synonyms: break, crack, fracture, burst, split, splinter, shatter, smash
After an hour, I had a fracture from bricklaying.

You each take a third of the beer, and I’ll drink the rest.
Synonyms: rest- something left after other parts have been taken away; "there was no remainder"; "he threw away the rest"; "he took what he wanted and I got the balance"
remainder, residual, residuum, residue, balance
You each take a third of the beer and I’ll drink the residue.


Synonym lists from:
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/

@Raymott, thanks. That is quite funny!! :lol: :up:

It reminds me of a cartoon about wine tasting. The person in the cartoon says he likes the wine and asks which one it is. It is actually from the spittoon where people swirl the wine in their mouth and then spit it out! I forgot if there is a special word for that.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Ask a Teacher

If you have a question about the English language and would like to ask one of our many English teachers and language experts, please click the button below to let us know:

(Requires Registration)
Back
Top