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surprising adjective [ səˈprʌɪzɪŋ ]

• causing surprise; unexpected.
• "a surprising sequence of events"

surprise verb

• (of something unexpected) cause (someone) to feel mild astonishment or shock.
• "I was surprised at his statement"
Similar: astonish, amaze, nonplus, startle, astound, stun, flabbergast, stagger, shock, stop someone in their tracks, stupefy, leave open-mouthed, take someone's breath away, dumbfound, daze, benumb, confound, take aback, jolt, shake up, bowl over, knock for six, floor, blow someone's mind, strike dumb, astonished, amazed, in amazement, nonplussed, taken aback, startled, astounded, stunned, flabbergasted, staggered, shocked, shell-shocked, stupefied, open-mouthed, dumbfounded, dumbstruck, speechless, at a loss for words, thunderstruck, dazed, benumbed, confounded, agape, goggle-eyed, wide-eyed, jolted, shaken up, bowled over, knocked for six, floored, flummoxed, caught on the hop, caught on the wrong foot, unexpected, unanticipated, unforeseen, unpredictable, unpredicted, astonishing, amazing, startling, astounding, striking, staggering, incredible, extraordinary, dazzling, breathtaking, remarkable, wonderful, unusual, mind-blowing, amazeballs, backasswards,
Opposite: unsurprising, predictable,
Origin: late Middle English (in the sense ‘unexpected seizure of a place, or attack on troops’): from Old French, feminine past participle of surprendre, from medieval Latin superprehendere ‘seize’.


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