wondrous

listen to the pronunciation of wondrous
English - Turkish
{s} harikulâde
mükemmel
{s} harika

İnsan beyni harika bir şeydir. Konuşmak için sen ayakta kalana kadar çalışır. - The human brain is a wondrous thing. It works until the moment you stand up to make a speech.

{s} fevkalade
olağandışı şekilde
wondrouslyharikulade bir şekilde
wondrousnessharikuladelik
şaşılacak şekilde
{s} şaşılacak
wondrously
harikulade bir şekilde
wondrously
harika şekilde
wondrously
şaşılacak biçimde
English - English
Amazing, inspiring awe, "to be marvelled at"

We all stared open mouthed at the wondrous sight, speechless.

{a} marvellous, strange
incredibly; wonderfully, in an amazing manner (Archaic)
(used as an intensifier) extremely well; "her voice is superbly disciplined"; "the colors changed wondrously slowly"
If you describe something as wondrous, you mean it is strange and beautiful or impressive. We were driven across this wondrous vast land of lakes and forests. good or impressive in a surprising way (wonders (13-17 centuries), from the possessive form of wonder; influenced by marvelous)
Wonderful; astonishing; admirable; marvelous; such as excite surprise and astonishment; strange
In a wonderful or surprising manner or degree; wonderfully
extraordinarily good; used especially as intensifiers; "a fantastic trip to the Orient"; "the film was fantastic!"; "a howling success"; "a marvelous collection of rare books"; "had a rattling conversation about politics"; "a tremendous achievement"
{s} wonderful, marvelous
wondrously
{a} to a strange degree, strangely
wondrously
(used as an intensifier) extremely well; "her voice is superbly disciplined"; "the colors changed wondrously slowly"
wondrously
marvelously; fantastically, splendidly
wondrously
In a wondrous manner
wondrous

    Turkish pronunciation

    wʌndrıs

    Pronunciation

    /ˈwəndrəs/ /ˈwʌndrəs/

    Etymology

    [ 'w&n-dr&s ] (adjective.) 15th century. From Late Middle English wondrous, metathetic variation of wonders (adj., “wondrous, wonderful”), genitive of wonder (“wonder, miracle”), from Old English wundor (“wonder, miracle”), from Proto-Germanic *wundran (“wonder”). Compare Dutch wonders, German Wunders.

    Videos

    ... to summarize all the wondrous properties of string theory into one equation. ...
Favorites