Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- intransitive verb To strike with sudden fear; alarm. synonym: frighten.
- intransitive verb To become frightened.
- noun A condition or sensation of sudden fear.
- noun A general state of alarm; a panic.
- adjective Serving or intended to frighten people.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To fasten (two pieces of wood) by splicing; join by fitting; splice.
- noun A joint in carpentry; a splice; one of the parts of a fishing-rod; etc.
- noun In golf, the narrow part of the neck of the club where it is fastened to the shaft, then glued and bound with whipping.
- noun An obsolete form of
scar . - noun A sudden fright or panic: particularly applied to a sudden terror inspired by a trifling cause, or a purely imaginary or causeless alarm.
- Lean; scanty; scraggy.
- Timid; shying.
- To frighten; terrify suddenly; strike with sudden terror or fear.
- Synonyms To daunt, appal, frighten; scare represents the least of dignity in the act or in the result; it generally implies suddenness.
- To become frightened; be scared: as, a horse that scares easily.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- transitive verb To frighten; to strike with sudden fear; to alarm.
- transitive verb to drive away by frightening.
- transitive verb [Slang] to find by search, as if by beating for game.
- noun colloq. Fright; esp., sudden fright produced by a trifling cause, or originating in mistake.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A minor
fright . - noun A cause of slight
terror ; something that inspires fear or dread. - verb To
frighten ,terrify ,startle , especially in a minor way.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a sudden attack of fear
- noun sudden mass fear and anxiety over anticipated events
- verb cause to lose courage
- verb cause fear in
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
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Examples
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In the U.S., food irradiation is used for various products, including ground beef, but most retailers resist the practice, lest the word irradiated'' on the label scare off customers.
When Precaution Trumps Public Safety Matt Ridley 2011
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In the U.S., food irradiation is used for various products, including ground beef, but most retailers resist the practice, lest the word irradiated'' on the label scare off customers.
When Precaution Trumps Public Safety Matt Ridley 2011
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The 3 Geeks Super-Sized Swimsuit Spectacular - while the whole comics/swimsuits thing is very 1990s and pretty much played out by the Amazing Heroes specials long before Marvel and Image started doing them, don't let the title scare you off...this is classic 3 Geeks material.
Archive 2004-07-04 2004
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The 3 Geeks Super-Sized Swimsuit Spectacular - while the whole comics/swimsuits thing is very 1990s and pretty much played out by the Amazing Heroes specials long before Marvel and Image started doing them, don't let the title scare you off...this is classic 3 Geeks material.
Archive 2004-07-04 2004
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If you couldn't care less about money except perhaps about making more of it, like most of us do, don't let the title scare you away.
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QUIJANO: Yet without mentioning Republicans by name, the president blasted what he called scare tactics by opponents, calling the notion of a bureaucratic death panel a lie, and he insisted illegal immigrants would not be covered, prompting an outburst from South Carolina GOP Congressman Joe Wilson.
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QUIJANO: Yet, without mentioning Republicans by name, the president blasted what he called scare tactics by opponents, calling the notion of a bureaucratic "death panel" a lie and he insisted illegal immigrants would not be covered, prompting an outburst from South Carolina GOP Congressman Joe Wilson.
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Today, he warned against what he called scare tactics in the debate over Social Security.
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President Bush warned that his critics are using what he called scare tactics to discredit his proposal.
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President Obama took the bully pulpit to New Hampshire on Tuesday to counter what he called scare tactics from opponents of his health-care reform efforts, but it's clear that the health debate has become a proxy for a bigger fight over whether the federal government is assuming too much control over the economy.
bilby commented on the word scare
BOO!
July 25, 2008