40 adverbs to describe how to shocks

"I fear Lady Mary may be deeply shocked and hurt at being thus excluded from your confidence in so serious a case.

" "My dear, feelings are nothing," said the Vicar's wife, with a decision that would have shocked the Reverend Stephen unspeakably.

Inexpressibly shocked, the major took her hands, by gentle compulsion, covering them with kisses, and literally bathing them in tears.

" As they changed their topic, Mrs. Wilson joined her sister, dreadfully shocked at this intimation of the vices of a man so near an alliance with her brother's child.

Profoundly shocked as they are by the senseless folly and monstrous bloodshed of the present conflict, it is certain that when this phase is over they will insist on having a voice in the politics of the future.

Of course, I'm terribly shocked to know that two midshipmen really had the grit to fightbut who were they!

I hope you will forgive my rudeness, Mr. White; but the truth is I was awfully shocked at the first sight of the house.

Larry was genuinely shocked at his own bad manners.

They will exterminate your tribe with machine-guns, gin, small-pox, and still nastier things, but they are fearfully shocked at a bit of killing on the part of others.

Of course they were horribly shocked at the idea of the tragedy so close at hand, though I softened the details as well as I could.

She did not comprehend how little they really proved a full consciousness on her mother's part; and she was unutterably shocked, when, on going to her bedside one morning, she found her unable to move, and evidently without clear recognition of any one's face.

"I am exceedingly shocked that Miss Harvey should have run so much danger for anything so worthless as my life.

I honour him, and love him, and glory in his memory...." Southey, writing to his friend, C. W. W. Wynn, on the 3rd of April 1805, says: "DEAR WYNN, I have been grievously shocked this evening by the loss of the 'Abergavenny', of which Wordsworth's brother was captain.

Sylvia was immeasurably shocked by his aspect.

With an almost savage vehemence of gesticulation she suddenly tore up her scanty clothing, and exhibited a spectacle with which I was inconceivably shocked and sickened.

From a feeling of delicacy, he adopted the latter course, and was indescribably shocked to pull off his fancy at Epsom.

He was ineffably shocked at the old squire's villany in the matter, but declared to all to whom he spoke openly on the subject that he did not see how the sinner could be punished.

Frankly, I was shocked by the unfortunate young prune's appearance.

This is at first seemingly unintelligible: for the apostles certainly would have been intensely shocked at the thought of punishing men, in body, purse, or station, for not being Christians or not being orthodox.

He cannot for purposes of tragedy be wholly good: for not only is this extremely rare in real life, and almost inconceivable, but the ruin of a wholly good man would merely shock, without teaching us anything.

She died suddenly, however, and this shocked the baron so mightily that he could not remain in the castle.

Under the great brush of his moustache, Lawlor set his teeth, but he was instantly at ease; for if the sight of the stranger shook him to the very centre, the other was even more obviously shocked by what he saw.

The chief of the Buccaneers, were he English or French, a Morgan or a Granmont, was still a responsible person, whose country might countenance him, or even praise him, so long as he refrained from any deed which might shock the leathery seventeenth-century conscience too outrageously.

The dauphin and dauphiness were deeply shocked by a disaster so painfully at variance with their own happiness, which, in one sense, had caused it.

"This is outrageous!" cried Mr. Tutt, palpably shocked at such language.

40 adverbs to describe how to  shocks  - Adverbs for  shocks