VS.

Disturbed vs. Impressed

Published:

Disturbedadjective

Showing symptoms of mental illness, severe psychosis, or neurosis.

Impressedadjective

strongly affected, especially favourably

Disturbedadjective

Extremely alarmed; shocked.

Impressedadjective

stamped, under pressure

Disturbedverb

simple past tense and past participle of disturb

Impressedadjective

compelled to serve in a military force

Disturbedadjective

having the place or position changed;

‘the disturbed books and papers on her desk’; ‘disturbed grass showed where the horse had passed’;

Impressedadjective

confiscated by force or authority

Disturbedadjective

afflicted with or marked by anxious uneasiness or trouble or grief;

‘too upset to say anything’; ‘spent many disquieted moments’; ‘distressed about her son's leaving home’; ‘lapsed into disturbed sleep’; ‘worried parents’; ‘a worried frown’; ‘one last worried check of the sleeping children’;

Impressedverb

simple past tense and past participle of impress

Disturbedadjective

emotionally unstable and having difficulty coping with personal relationships

Impressed

having the conscious mind deeply or markedly affected or influenced; - usually used with by or with.

Disturbedadjective

lacking order or stability;

‘these unsettled times’;

Impressedadjective

deeply or markedly affected or influenced

Disturbedadjective

affected with madness or insanity;

‘a man who had gone mad’;

Popular Comparisons

Latest Comparisons

Trending Comparisons