to frighten from

  • 81fright — 01. The children gasped in [fright] when the monster appeared on stage. 02. We got quite a [fright] when someone banged on our door in the middle of the night. 03. The mouse squeaked with [fright] when it saw the cat. 04. The child got… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 82bother — both|er1 W3S1 [ˈbɔðə US ˈba:ðər] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(make an effort)¦ 2¦(worry)¦ 3¦(annoy)¦ 4 somebody can t/couldn t be bothered (to do something) 5¦(cause pain)¦ 6 sorry to bother you 7¦(frighten)¦ 8 not bother yourself/not bother your head 9 bother… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 83scare off — 1) PHRASAL VERB If you scare off or scare away a person or animal, you frighten them so that they go away. [V P n (not pron)] ...an alarm to scare off an attacker. [V n P] ...the problem of scaring birds away from airport runways. Syn: frighten… …

    English dictionary

  • 84Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer — preserving his body well enough that some scientists who discovered him in 1988 thawed him out. He subsequently attended law school.Cirroc was a defense and personal injury lawyer, and, in a later skit, a politician running for President on the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 85Batman Begins (video game) — Infobox VG title = Batman Begins developer = Eurocom publisher = EA Games/Warner Bros I.E designer = engine = released = vgrelease|US|14 June 2005 [cite web|title=Batman Begins for Xbox|url=http://www.gamespot.com/xbox/action/batmanbegins/index.ht… …

    Wikipedia

  • 86Works of Maya Angelou — The works of Maya Angelou encompass autobiography, poetry, plays, screenplays for television and film, directing, acting, and speaking. She is best known for her series of six autobiographies, starting with the critically acclaimed I Know Why the …

    Wikipedia

  • 87aghast — a|ghast [əˈga:st US əˈgæst] adj [not before noun] written [Date: 1200 1300; Origin: From the past participle of aghast to frighten (13 16 centuries), from gast to frighten (11 17 centuries), from Old English gAstan] feeling or looking shocked by… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 88hell — /hɛl / (say hel) noun 1. (also upper case) (in many religions and mythologies) the abode of the spirits of the dead, often, as in Christianity, a place or state of existence where the wicked are punished after death. See Gehenna, Hades. Compare… …

  • 89fley — ˈfləi, ˈflā verb (fleyed ; fleyed ; fleying ; fleys) Etymology: Middle English flayen, from Old English āflēgan, āflȳgan, from ā , ar , perfective prefix + flēgan, flȳgan, causative from the root of English flee more at abear, flee …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 90afear — I. əˈfi(ə)r transitive verb Etymology: Middle English aferen, from Old English āfǣran, from ā (perfective prefix) + fǣran to frighten more at abear, fear now dialect England : frighten II. conjunction …

    Useful english dictionary