fill+with+horror

  • 71Persuasion (roman) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Persuasion (homonymie). Persuasion …

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  • 72alarm — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. alarum, warning; tocsin; SOS, siren, danger signal, red light or flag; condition red; fear, unease. v. frighten, panic, scare; shock, horrify; make uneasy; sound the alarm, bell, or tocsin; alert,… …

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  • 73panic — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. terror, fright, fear, consternation; stampede. v. alarm, frighten; stampede. See excitability, failure. Ant., calm. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Overpowering fright] Syn. fear, dread, alarm, fright; see… …

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  • 74thrill — vb Thrill, electrify, enthuse are comparable when they mean to fill with emotions that stir or excite physically and mentally or to be stirred by such emotions. Thrill suggests pervasion by emotions that set one atingle or aquiver (as with… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 75curdle — verb (with reference to a liquid) separate or cause to separate into solid and liquid parts. Phrases make one s blood curdle fill one with horror. Derivatives curdler noun Origin C16: frequentative of obs. curd congeal …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 76appal — /əˈpɔl / (say uh pawl) verb (t) (appalled, appalling) 1. to overcome with fear; fill with consternation and horror. 2. to shock; dismay; displease. Also, appall. {Middle English apalle(n), from Old French apallir become or make pale} Usage:… …

  • 77appall — verb 1. strike with disgust or revulsion The scandalous behavior of this married woman shocked her friends • Syn: ↑shock, ↑offend, ↑scandalize, ↑scandalise, ↑appal, ↑outrage • Derivationally related forms …

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  • 78horrify — transitive verb ( fied; fying) Date: 1791 1. to cause to feel horror 2. to fill with distaste ; shock Synonyms: see dismay • horrifyingly adverb …

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  • 79appall — /euh pawl /, v.t. to fill or overcome with horror, consternation, or fear; dismay: He was appalled by the damage from the fire. I am appalled at your mistakes. Also, appal. [1275 1325; ME < MF ap(p)allir to grow or make pale, equiv. to a A 5 +&#8230; …

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  • 80curdle — curdler, n. /kerr dl/, v.t., v.i., curdled, curdling. 1. to change into curd; coagulate; congeal. 2. to spoil; turn sour. 3. to go wrong; turn bad or fail: Their friendship began to curdle as soon as they became business rivals. 4. curdle the or&#8230; …

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