excited |
overwhelmed |
As verbs the difference between excited and overwhelmed
is that
excited is past participle of lang=en while
overwhelmed is past tense of overwhelm.
As an adjective excited
is having great enthusiasm.
excited |
attractive |
As adjectives the difference between excited and attractive
is that
excited is having great enthusiasm while
attractive is causing attraction; having the quality of attracting by inherent force.
As a verb excited
is .
excited |
crazy |
As adjectives the difference between excited and crazy
is that
excited is having great enthusiasm while
crazy is insane; lunatic; demented.
As a verb excited
is past participle of lang=en.
As an adverb crazy is
very, extremely.
As a noun crazy is
an insane or eccentric person; a crackpot.
excited |
elites |
As an adjective excited
is having great enthusiasm.
As a verb excited
is .
As a noun elites is
.
excited |
assertive |
As adjectives the difference between excited and assertive
is that
excited is having great enthusiasm while
assertive is boldly self-assured; confident without being aggressive.
As a verb excited
is past participle of lang=en.
excited |
tranquil |
As adjectives the difference between excited and tranquil
is that
excited is having great enthusiasm while
tranquil is free from emotional or mental disturbance.
As a verb excited
is past participle of lang=en.
excited |
performance |
As an adjective excited
is having great enthusiasm.
As a verb excited
is past participle of lang=en.
As a noun performance is
the act of performing; carrying into execution or action; execution; achievement; accomplishment; representation by action.
static |
excited |
As adjectives the difference between static and excited
is that
static is unchanging; that cannot or does not change while
excited is having great enthusiasm.
As a noun static
is interference on a broadcast signal caused by atmospheric disturbances; heard as crackles on radio, or seen as random specks on television.
As a verb excited is
past participle of lang=en.
provoked |
excited |
As verbs the difference between provoked and excited
is that
provoked is past tense of provoke while
excited is past participle of lang=en.
As an adjective excited is
having great enthusiasm.
hasty |
excited |
As adjectives the difference between hasty and excited
is that
hasty is acting in haste; being too hurried or quick (eg
without much thinking about it they made a hasty decision to buy it ) while
excited is having great enthusiasm.
As a verb excited is
.
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