English edit

Adjective edit

wonder-striking (comparative more wonder-striking, superlative most wonder-striking)

  1. Inspiring wonder or awe.
    Synonym: awestriking
    • 1643, John Vicars, Prodigies & Apparitions, or, Englands Warning Piece,[1]:
      [] hath not the Lord used that other more terrible and heart-frighting course [] of Prodigies, Signes and Apparitions in the ayre, and other most degenerating, unnaturall and wonder-striking contingents amongst us here at home?
    • 1887, Edwin Abbott Abbott, The Kernel and the Husk[2], Boston: Roberts Brothers, Letter 21, p. 234:
      [] by revealing to us the wonder-striking order of the infinite stars [] Night leads us to dream, or to infer, that there may be other pages still unturned in the book of Nature’s mysteries,
    • 1918, Arnold Bennett, The Roll-Call[3], London: Hutchinson, Part 1, Chapter 2, p. 26:
      The sensation of having the mysterious girl at his elbow in that wonder-striking interior was magnificent.
    • 1952, “The Voyage”, in Roy Campbell, transl., Poems of Baudelaire: A Translation of Les Fleurs du mal[4], London: Harvill, page 174:
      We have seen wonder-striking robes and dresses,
      Women whose nails and teeth the betel stains
      And jugglers whom the rearing snake caresses.