....
angry:
"She was angry with her boss for criticising her work."
"He made her very angry." ]
annoyed =
"I'm very annoyed with him. He hasn't returned any of my calls."
"She was annoyed by his suggestion that she was lazy."
appalled =
." very shocked: "The staff were appalled to hear that they would all lose their jobs
apprehensive :
slightly worried about the future: "I felt a little apprehensive before my interview.
ashamed:
"How could you say such a thing? You should be ashamed of yourself!"
at the end of your tether =
completely fed up: "The children have been misbehaving all day - I'm at the end of my tether."
bewildered =
very confused: "He was bewildered by the choice and range of computers in the shop, and didn't know which one to buy."
betrayed =
when your trust in someone is destroyed by what they do or say: "He betrayed my trust when he repeated my secret to everyone."
confused:
"I'm sorry I forgot your birthday - I was confused about the dates."
confident =
sure of your abilities: "I'm confident that we can find a solution to this problem."
cheated =
when you don't get something that you think you deserve: "Of course I l cheated - I should have won that competition."
cross =
quite angry: "I was cross with him for not helping me, as he said he would."
depressed =
very sad: "After he failed his English exam, he was depressed for a week."
delighted =
very happy: "I'm delighted that I got the job. It's just what I always wanted."
down in the dumps =
sad and fed up: "What's the matter with him? He's so down in the dumps these days."
disappointed:
"She was disappointed by her son's r results at school." E
ecstatic =
extremely happy: "When he asked her to marry him she was ecstatic."
excited:
"I'm excited by the new opportunities that the internet brings."
emotional =
you have strong lings (happy or sad) and you "After the operation was over and he knew that he was healthy again, he became quite emotional."
embarrassed =
slightly ashamed: "I felt so embarrassed about what I said, that my face went bright red."
furious =
very angry: "I was furious with him for breaking my favourite vase."
frightened:
"As a child she was frightened by the dark."
great =
very "I l great today!"
happy:
"She was happy to hear the good news."
horrified
= very shocked: "I'm horrified by the amount of violence on television today."
irritated = annoyed:
[]"I get so irritated when he changes TV channels without asking
jealous =
envious: "She was jealous of her sister's new toy."
keen:
"I'm keen to see your new house - I've heard lots about it."
"I'm keen on keeping fit." L
lazy:
"I can't be bothered to do anything today - I l really lazy!"
lucky:
"I'm going to play the lottery - I l lucky today!"
over the moon =
delighted: "She was over the moon with her new bicycle and rode it every day for a whole year."
relaxed:
"I was completely relaxed after I came back from holiday."
sad:
"It makes me sad to see all those animals in cages at the zoo."
scared =
frightened: "Are you scared of heights?"
stressed
being worried or anxious about something so you can't relax: "I l really stressed at work - I need a break."
"He was stressed out by all the travelling in his job." T
terrible =
ill or tired: "I've got a blinding headache and I l terrible."
upset=
angry or unhappy: "I'm sorry you're upset - I didn't mean to be rude."
victimised =
to l you are the victim of someone or something: "My boss kept criticising me and not the others, so I felt quite victimised." W
wonderful =
gr "I felt wonderful after such a relaxing weekend