-
1 startled
['stɑːtld]ADJ [animal] asustado, espantado; [person] sorprendido; [expression, voice] de sobresalto, sobresaltado -
2 startled
adj.1 de sobresalto (look, cry)2 alarmado.3 sorprendido, abarustado.pp.participio pasado del verbo STARTLE.pt.pretérito del verbo STARTLE. -
3 be startled or frightened
-
4 be startled
v.estar alarmado. -
5 get startled
v.sobresaltarse, dar un sobresalto, sorprenderse, brincar del susto. -
6 startle
(to give a shock or surprise to: The sound startled me.)startle vb asustar / dar un sustotr['stɑːtəl]1 asustar, sobresaltar■ you startled me! ¡me has asustado!v.• asustar v.• chocar v.• espantar v.• ojear v.• sobrecoger v.• sobresaltar v.'stɑːrtḷ, 'stɑːtḷtransitive verb sobresaltar, asustar['stɑːtl]VT asustar, sobresaltaryou quite startled me! — ¡vaya susto que me has dado!
* * *['stɑːrtḷ, 'stɑːtḷ]transitive verb sobresaltar, asustar -
7 jump
1. verb1) (to (cause to) go quickly off the ground with a springing movement: He jumped off the wall / across the puddle / over the fallen tree / into the swimming-pool; Don't jump the horse over that fence!) saltar2) (to rise; to move quickly (upwards): She jumped to her feet; He jumped into the car.) saltar3) (to make a startled movement: The noise made me jump.) saltar; sobresaltar(se)4) (to pass over (a gap etc) by bounding: He jumped the stream easily.) saltar
2. noun1) (an act of jumping: She crossed the stream in one jump.) salto2) (an obstacle to be jumped over: Her horse fell at the third jump.) valla, obstáculo3) (a jumping competition: the high jump.) salto4) (a startled movement: She gave a jump when the door suddenly banged shut.) salto, brinco5) (a sudden rise, eg in prices: There has been a jump in the price of potatoes.) salto, aumento•- jumpy- jump at
- jump for joy
- jump on
- jump the gun
- jump the queue
- jump to conclusions / jump to the conclusion that
- jump to it
jump vb1. saltar2. sobresaltarsetr[ʤʌmp]1 salto2 (in prices etc) salto, aumento importante, disparo3 (fence) valla, obstáculo1 saltar2 (rise sharply) dar un salto■ inflation jumped 2% last month la inflación dio un salto de un 2% el mes pasado1 saltar■ he tried to jump the wall, but it was too high intentó saltar el muro, pero era demasiado alto\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto give somebody a jump pegar un susto a alguiento jump down somebody's throat saltar a alguien, echársele encima a alguiento jump for joy saltar de alegríato jump out of one's skin pegarse un susto de muerteto jump rope SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL saltar a la combato jump the gun precipitarse, adelantarseto jump the lights saltarse el semáforo en rojoto jump the queue colarseto jump the rails descarrilarto jump to conclusions llegar a conclusiones precipitadasto keep one jump ahead of somebody ir un paso por delante de alguiento make somebody jump dar un susto a alguienjump leads cables nombre masculino plural de emergenciajump seat asiento plegablejump suit monojump ['ʤʌmp] vi1) leap: saltar, brincar2) start: levantarse de un salto, sobresaltarse3) move, shift: moverse, pasarto jump from job to job: pasar de un empleo a otro4) increase, rise: dar un salto, aumentarse de golpe, subir bruscamente5) bustle: animarse, ajetrearse6)to jump to conclusions : sacar conclusiones precipitadasjump vt1) : saltarto jump a fence: saltar una valla2) skip: saltarse3) attack: atacar, asaltar4)to jump the gun : precipitarsejump n1) leap: salto m2) start: sobresalto m, respingo m3) increase: subida f brusca, aumento m4) advantage: ventaja fwe got the jump on them: les llevamos la ventajan.• brinco s.m.• lanzamiento s.m.• salto s.m.v.• brincar v.• cabriolear v.• lanzarse v.• saltar v.
I
1. dʒʌmp1)a) ( leap) saltarb) ( move quickly)jump in, I'll give you a lift — súbete que te llevo
to jump AT something: they'll jump at the chance no van a dejar pasar la oportunidad; to jump on somebody/something abalanzarse* sobre alguien/algo; to jump to one's feet ponerse* de pie or (AmL tb) pararse de un salto; to jump to attention ( Mil) cuadrarse, ponerse* firme; jump to it! — hazlo inmediatamente!
2)a) (change, skip) saltar, pasarb) (increase, advance suddenly) subir de un golpe3)a) ( jerk) saltarb) ( in alarm) sobresaltarse
2.
vt1) ( leap over) \<\<hurdle\>\> saltar, brincar* (Méx); \<\<counter/piece\>\> ( Games) comerseto jump rope — (AmE) saltar a la cuerda or (Esp tb) a la comba or (Chi) al cordel, brincar* la reata (Méx)
2)a) ( spring out of) \<\<railsacks\>\> salirse* deb) ( disregard) saltarseto jump the lights — pasar el semáforo en rojo, pasarse el alto (Méx)
to jump the line o (BrE) queue — colarse*
3) ( run away from) (colloq)to jump bail — huir* estando en libertad bajo fianza
4) (ambush, attack) (colloq) asaltar, atacar*5) ( catch) (AmE colloq) \<\<bus/plane\>\> agarrar (fam) or (esp Esp) coger*; ( without paying fare)
II
1)a) ( leap) salto mgo (and) take a running jump! — (colloq) vete a freír espárragos! (fam)
to be/stay one jump ahead: this way, you'll be one jump ahead of the competition de esta manera le llevarás la delantera a la competencia; she tried to stay one jump ahead of her pupils — trataba de mantenerse un paso adelante de sus alumnos
b) ( fence) valla f, obstáculo m2)a) ( sudden transition) salto mb) (increase, advance) aumento m[dʒʌmp]1. N1) (Sport, Parachuting) salto m; (=leap) salto m, brinco mwhat a great jump! — ¡qué gran salto!
running 4.in or at one jump — de un salto, de un brinco
2) (=start)3) (=fence, obstacle) obstáculo m4) (fig) (=step) salto min one jump he went from novice to master — de un salto or golpe pasó de novicio a maestro
Taiwan made the jump from poverty to wealth in a single generation — Taiwán pasó de golpe or dio el salto de la pobreza a la riqueza en una sola generación
- be one jump aheadtry to keep one jump ahead of the competition — intenta llevarle ventaja or la delantera a la competencia
- get a or the jump on sb5) (=increase) aumento m, subida fthere has been a jump in prices/unemployment — se ha producido un aumento or una subida de precios/del número de parados
2. VIhow far can you jump? — ¿hasta qué distancia puedes saltar?
how high can you jump? — ¿hasta qué altura puedes saltar?
did he jump or was he pushed? — (lit) ¿saltó o lo empujaron?, ¿se tiró o lo empujaron?; (fig) ¿se fue o lo echaron?
•
to jump across a stream — cruzar un arroyo de un salto, saltar por encima de un arroyo•
he jumped back in horror — de un salto retrocedió horrorizado•
she jumped into the river — se tiró al ríothere were plenty of men ready to jump into bed with me — (fig) había muchos hombres dispuestos a acostarse conmigo
•
to jump off a busain — bajar de un autobúsen de un salto•
to jump on a busain — subir a un autobúsen de un salto•
he jumped out of a third floor window — saltó or se tiró desde una ventana del tercer piso•
he jumped over the fence — saltó (por encima de) la valla•
he jumped to his feet — se puso de pie de un saltojump to it! * — ¡venga, muévete!, ¡rápido!, ¡apúrate! (LAm)
•
to jump up — ponerse de pie de un salto2) (=start) sobresaltarse•
he jumped at the sound of her voice — se sobresaltó al oír su voz•
to make sb jump — dar un susto a algn, sobresaltar a algnskinyou made me jump! — ¡qué susto me diste!
3) (fig) (with prep, adv)•
to jump at sth — no dejar escapar algothey offered me a really good salary and thought I'd jump at it — me ofrecieron un sueldo buenísimo y creyeron que no lo dejaría escapar
he'd jump at the chance to get out of the office — si tuviera la oportunidad de irse de la oficina no la dejaría escapar
•
then the film jumps forward 20 years — luego la película da un salto adelante de 20 años•
to jump from one subject to another — saltar de un tema a otrobandwagon, conclusion, throat•
he jumps on everything I say — le pone faltas a todo lo que digo4) (=increase) [sales, profits] subir, aumentar; [shares] subir3. VT1) (lit) (also: jump over) [+ ditch, fence] saltar (por encima de); (in draughts, chess) comerse2) [+ horse] (=cause to jump) hacer saltar; (=enter in competition) presentar; (=ride) montar3) (fig) (=skip) saltarsethe film jumped the first ten years of his life — la película se saltó los diez primeros años de su vida
•
to jump the lights — (Aut) * saltarse el semáforo (en rojo)4) (=leave, escape)•
to jump bail — (Jur) fugarse estando bajo fianza•
to jump ship — (lit) desertar (de un buque); (fig) (=leave) marcharse; (=join rival organization) irse con la competencia5) (=anticipate)- jump the gun6) (=board)7) * (=attack) echarse encima de4.CPDjump jockey N — jockey m de carreras (de obstáculos)
jump leads NPL — (Brit) (Aut) cables mpl de arranque (de batería)
jump rope N — (US) comba f, cuerda f de saltar
jump seat N — (Aut, Aer) asiento m plegable
- jump in- jump off- jump out* * *
I
1. [dʒʌmp]1)a) ( leap) saltarb) ( move quickly)jump in, I'll give you a lift — súbete que te llevo
to jump AT something: they'll jump at the chance no van a dejar pasar la oportunidad; to jump on somebody/something abalanzarse* sobre alguien/algo; to jump to one's feet ponerse* de pie or (AmL tb) pararse de un salto; to jump to attention ( Mil) cuadrarse, ponerse* firme; jump to it! — hazlo inmediatamente!
2)a) (change, skip) saltar, pasarb) (increase, advance suddenly) subir de un golpe3)a) ( jerk) saltarb) ( in alarm) sobresaltarse
2.
vt1) ( leap over) \<\<hurdle\>\> saltar, brincar* (Méx); \<\<counter/piece\>\> ( Games) comerseto jump rope — (AmE) saltar a la cuerda or (Esp tb) a la comba or (Chi) al cordel, brincar* la reata (Méx)
2)a) ( spring out of) \<\<rails/tracks\>\> salirse* deb) ( disregard) saltarseto jump the lights — pasar el semáforo en rojo, pasarse el alto (Méx)
to jump the line o (BrE) queue — colarse*
3) ( run away from) (colloq)to jump bail — huir* estando en libertad bajo fianza
4) (ambush, attack) (colloq) asaltar, atacar*5) ( catch) (AmE colloq) \<\<bus/plane\>\> agarrar (fam) or (esp Esp) coger*; ( without paying fare)
II
1)a) ( leap) salto mgo (and) take a running jump! — (colloq) vete a freír espárragos! (fam)
to be/stay one jump ahead: this way, you'll be one jump ahead of the competition de esta manera le llevarás la delantera a la competencia; she tried to stay one jump ahead of her pupils — trataba de mantenerse un paso adelante de sus alumnos
b) ( fence) valla f, obstáculo m2)a) ( sudden transition) salto mb) (increase, advance) aumento m -
8 jumpy
adjective (nervous; easily upset: He has been very jumpy and irritable lately.) nerviosotr['ʤʌmpɪ]1 nervioso,-aadj.• alborotadizo, -a adj.• asustadizo, -a adj.• nervioso, -a adj.• saltón, -ona adj.'dʒʌmpiadjective -pier, -piest nervioso['dʒʌmpɪ]ADJ (compar jumpier) (superl jumpiest) nervioso; (=easily startled) asustadizo* * *['dʒʌmpi]adjective -pier, -piest nervioso -
9 man
mæn
1. plural - men; noun1) (an adult male human being: Hundreds of men, women and children; a four-man team.) hombre2) (human beings taken as a whole; the human race: the development of man.) ser humano, hombre3) (obviously masculine male person: He's independent, tough, strong, brave - a real man!) hombre4) (a word sometimes used in speaking informally or giving commands to someone: Get on with your work, man, and stop complaining!) hombre, tío, macho5) (an ordinary soldier, who is not an officer: officers and men.) soldado6) (a piece used in playing chess or draughts: I took three of his men in one move.) pieza, ficha
2. verb(to supply with men (especially soldiers): The colonel manned the guns with soldiers from our regiment.) dotar de personal- - man- manhood
- mankind
- manly
- manliness
- manned
- man-eating
- man-eater
- manhandle
- manhole
- man-made
- manpower
- manservant
- mansized
- mansize
- manslaughter
- menfolk
- menswear
- as one man
- the man in the street
- man of letters
- man of the world
- man to man
- to a man
man n hombretr[mæn]1 Isla de Man1) person: hombre m, persona f2) male: hombre m3) mankind: humanidad fn.(§ pl.: men) = hombre s.m.• obrero s.m.• ser humano s.m.• señor s.m.• soldado s.m.• varón s.m.v.• dotar v.• guarnecer v.• proveer de gente armada v.• tripular v.= Manitoba[mæn]1. N(pl men)1) (=not woman) hombre m; (=husband) marido m; (=boyfriend) novio m; (=servant) criado m; (=workman) obrero m; (=ordinary soldier) soldado m; (=ordinary sailor) marinero mher man is in the army — (husband) su marido está en el ejército; (boyfriend) su novio está en el ejército
officers and men — (=soldiers) oficiales y soldados; (=sailors) oficiales y marineros
•
he's not the man for the job — no es el más indicado para esa tarea•
good man! — ¡bravo!, ¡muy bien!my good man — † buen hombre, amigo mío
all good men and true — liter todos los que merecen llamarse hombres
•
it's got to be a local man — tiene que ser uno de aquí•
to make a man of sb — hacer un hombre de algn•
to feel (like) a new man — sentirse como nuevo•
look here, old man — † mira, amigomy old man * — el viejo *
•
our man in Washington — (=agent) nuestro agente en Washington; (=representative) nuestro representante en Washington; (=ambassador) nuestro embajador en Washington•
man of straw — (=person of no substance) monigote m, títere m; (esp US) (=front man) hombre m de paja, testaferro m•
the strong man of the government — el hombre fuerte del gobierno•
that man Jones — aquel Jones•
man to man — de hombre a hombreto live as man and wife — vivir como casados or en matrimonio
•
a young man — un joven- be man enough to do sth- reach man's estatebest 5., cloth, grand 1., 1)2) (=humanity in general) (also: Man) el hombre3) (=individual, person) persona fwhat else could a man do? — ¿es que se podía hacer otra cosa?
men say that... — se dice que...
•
any man — cualquiera, cualquier hombre•
no man — ninguno, nadie•
as one man — como un solo hombre•
one man one vote — un voto para cada uno•
they agreed to a man — no hubo voz en contra•
then I'm your man — entonces soy la persona que estás buscando4) (=type)•
I'm not a drinking man — yo no bebo•
I'm not a football man — no soy aficionado al fútbol, no me gusta mucho el fútbol•
he's a man's man — es un hombre estimado entre otros hombres•
he's his own man — es un hombre muy fiel a sí mismo•
I'm a whisky man myself — yo prefiero el whisky5) (Chess) pieza f; (Draughts) ficha f6) * (excl)hey man! — ¡oye, tronco! *
you can't do that, man — hombre, no puedes hacer eso
man, was I startled! — ¡vaya susto que me dio!, ¡qué susto me pegué!
2.VT [+ ship] tripular; [+ fortress, watchtower] guarnecer; [+ guns] servir; [+ pumps] acudir a, hacer funcionarmanned3.CPDman day N — (Comm, Ind) día-hombre m
man flu * N — pej resfriado m
man Friday N — criado m fiel
men's doubles N — (Tennis) dobles mpl masculinos
men's final N — (Sport) final f masculina
men's room N — (esp US) lavabo m de caballeros
* * *= Manitoba -
10 sudden
(happening etc quickly and unexpectedly: a sudden attack; His decision to get married is rather sudden!; a sudden bend in the road.) súbito, repentino- suddenly
- all of a sudden
sudden adj1. repentino / súbito2. inesperadotr['sʌdən]1 (quick) súbito,-a, repentino,-a2 (unexpected) inesperado,-a, imprevisto,-a3 (abrupt) brusco,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLall of a sudden de repente, de pronto, de golpesudden death muerte nombre femenino súbitasudden ['sʌdən] adj1) : repentino, súbitoall of a sudden: de pronto, de repente2) unexpected: inesperado, improvisto3) abrupt, hasty: precipitado, bruscoadj.• arrebatado, -a adj.• brusco, -a adj.• fulminante adj.• imprevisto, -a adj.• inesperado, -a adj.• repentino, -a adj.• súbito, -a adj.n.• puñalada s.f.'sʌdṇa) ( rushed) repentino, súbito; ( unexpected) imprevisto, inesperadoisn't this all rather sudden? — ¿esto no es un poco apresurado or precipitado?
['sʌdn]all of a sudden — de repente, de pronto, repentinamente
1. ADJ1) (=hasty, swift) repentino; (=unexpected) inesperadothis is all so sudden! — ¡todo esto es tan repentino!
his death was sudden — su muerte ocurrió de repente, su muerte fue inesperada
all of a sudden — de pronto, de repente
2) (=abrupt) [movement] brusco2.CPDsudden death N — (Tennis) muerte f súbita
they had to go to sudden death — (Tennis) tuvieron que recurrir a la muerte súbita; (Ftbl) (penalty shoot-out) tuvieron que recurrir a los goles; (extra time) tuvieron que recurrir a la prórroga de desempate
sudden death extra time N — prórroga f de desempate
sudden death goal N — gol m de desempate
sudden death play-off N — desempate m instantáneo
sudden infant death syndrome N — (Med) síndrome m de la muerte súbita infantil
* * *['sʌdṇ]a) ( rushed) repentino, súbito; ( unexpected) imprevisto, inesperadoisn't this all rather sudden? — ¿esto no es un poco apresurado or precipitado?
all of a sudden — de repente, de pronto, repentinamente
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11 espantado
Del verbo espantar: ( conjugate espantar) \ \
espantado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: espantado espantar
espantado
◊ -da adjetivo
espantar ( conjugate espantar) verbo transitivo 1 2 (fam) ( horrorizar) to horrify, appall( conjugate appall) verbo intransitivoa) (fam) ( asustar):◊ es tan feo que espanta he's absolutely hideous (colloq)b) (Bol, Col, Ven fam) [ fantasma]:espantarse verbo pronominal [pájaro/peces] to get frightened away; [ caballo] to take fright, be startled
espantar verbo transitivo
1 (ahuyentar) to shoo o scare away: espantó a los atacantes con un tiro al aire, he scared away his attackers by firing a shot into the air
2 (causar espanto) to scare, frighten -
12 espantar
espantar ( conjugate espantar) verbo transitivo 1 2 (fam) ( horrorizar) to horrify, appall( conjugate appall) verbo intransitivoa) (fam) ( asustar):◊ es tan feo que espanta he's absolutely hideous (colloq)b) (Bol, Col, Ven fam) [ fantasma]:espantarse verbo pronominal [pájaro/peces] to get frightened away; [ caballo] to take fright, be startled
espantar verbo transitivo
1 (ahuyentar) to shoo o scare away: espantó a los atacantes con un tiro al aire, he scared away his attackers by firing a shot into the air
2 (causar espanto) to scare, frighten ' espantar' also found in these entries: English: scare - frighten -
13 espanto
Del verbo espantar: ( conjugate espantar) \ \
espanto es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
espantó es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: espantar espanto
espantar ( conjugate espantar) verbo transitivo 1 2 (fam) ( horrorizar) to horrify, appall( conjugate appall) verbo intransitivoa) (fam) ( asustar):◊ es tan feo que espanta he's absolutely hideous (colloq)b) (Bol, Col, Ven fam) [ fantasma]:espantarse verbo pronominal [pájaro/peces] to get frightened away; [ caballo] to take fright, be startled
espanto sustantivo masculino 1b) ( uso hiperbólico):◊ la noticia nos llenó de espanto we were horrified o appalled at the news;hace un frío de espanto (fam) it's freezing o terribly cold (colloq); ya está curada de espanto (fam) she's seen/heard it all before 2 (Bol, Col, Ven fam) ( espíritu) ghost, spook (colloq)
espantar verbo transitivo
1 (ahuyentar) to shoo o scare away: espantó a los atacantes con un tiro al aire, he scared away his attackers by firing a shot into the air
2 (causar espanto) to scare, frighten
espanto sustantivo masculino
1 (terror) panic, fright: siento espanto cuando me mira, he makes me shudder when he looks at me
2 (impresión fuerte) shock: ver toda esa sangre fue un espanto, it was shocking to see all that blood
3 fam (terrible) dreadful, awful: la obra de teatro era un espanto, the play was awful Locuciones: familiar de espanto, dreadful, shocking
estar curado,-a de espanto, to be inured to something: a mí no me impresiona, estoy curada de espanto, it doesn't impress me, I've seen it all before ' espanto' also found in these entries: Spanish: espantar - execrable English: flail - horrify -
14 sobresaltar
sobresaltar ( conjugate sobresaltar) verbo transitivo to startle, make … jump sobresaltarse verbo pronominal to jump, be startled
sobresaltar verbo transitivo to startle ' sobresaltar' also found in these entries: English: boggle - shock - startle -
15 sobresaltarse
■sobresaltarse verbo reflexivo to start, be startled ' sobresaltarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: sobresaltar English: start - jump -
16 sobresalto
Del verbo sobresaltar: ( conjugate sobresaltar) \ \
sobresalto es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
sobresaltó es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: sobresaltar sobresalto
sobresaltar ( conjugate sobresaltar) verbo transitivo to startle, make … jump sobresaltarse verbo pronominal to jump, be startled
sobresalto sustantivo masculino fright
sobresaltar verbo transitivo to startle
sobresalto sustantivo masculino start ' sobresalto' also found in these entries: Spanish: ay -
17 let fall
(to drop: She was so startled she let fall everything she was carrying.) dejar caer -
18 startle
vt.sobresaltar.vi.sobresaltarse, sobrecogerse, temblar de miedo.(pt & pp startled)
См. также в других словарях:
startled — adj. 1) startled at (startled at the news) 2) startled to + inf. (she was startled to hear of their divorce) * * * startled to + inf. (she was startled to hear of their divorce) startled at (startled at the news) … Combinatory dictionary
Startled Insects — Infobox musical artist Name = Startled Insects Img capt = Landscape = yes Background = group or band Origin = Bristol, flagicon|England England Genre = jazz Synthpop Years active = 1984 1996 Label = Antenna Records Antilles Records 2ndSight… … Wikipedia
startled — adj. VERBS ▪ appear, be, look, seem, sound ADVERB ▪ extremely, fairly, very, etc … Collocations dictionary
startled — star|tled [ startld ] adjective * suddenly frightened or surprised by something: I was startled to see a face suddenly appear at the window. Lisa whirled around, startled, at the sound of Vass s voice. the startled look on his face … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
startled */ — UK [ˈstɑː(r)t(ə)ld] / US [ˈstɑrt(ə)ld] adjective suddenly frightened or surprised by something I was startled to see a face suddenly appear at the window. Lisa whirled round, startled, at the sound of Vass s voice. the startled look on his face … English dictionary
startled — adjective excited by sudden surprise or alarm and making a quick involuntary movement (Freq. 6) students startled by the teacher s quiet return the sudden fluttering of the startled pigeons her startled expression • Similar to: ↑surprised … Useful english dictionary
Startled — Startle Star tle (st[aum]r t l), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Startled} (st[aum]r t ld); p. pr. & vb. n. {Startling} (st[aum]r tl[i^]ng).] [Freq. of start.] To move suddenly, or be excited, on feeling alarm; to start. [1913 Webster] Why shrinks the soul… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
startled — startle ► VERB ▪ cause to feel sudden shock or alarm. DERIVATIVES startled adjective. ORIGIN Old English, «kick, struggle»; related to START(Cf. ↑start) … English terms dictionary
startled — adjective Extremely shocked … Wiktionary
startled — Synonyms and related words: affrighted, alarmed, alerted, aroused, bowled down, consternated, daunted, dismayed, disquieted, electrified, frightened, in a fright, in a funk, jarred, jolted, shaken, shocked, shook, staggered, taken aback … Moby Thesaurus
startled — (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. frightened, alarmed, shocked; see surprised … English dictionary for students