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1 fear
rettegés, félelem, törvénytisztelet to fear: tart vkitől, aggódik, tart vmitől, félve tisztel* * *[fiə] 1. noun((a) feeling of great worry or anxiety caused by the knowledge of danger: The soldier tried not to show his fear; fear of water.) félelem2. verb1) (to feel fear because of (something): She feared her father when he was angry; I fear for my father's safety (= I am worried because I think he is in danger).) fél; aggódik vkiért2) (to regret: I fear you will not be able to see him today.) fél•- fearful- fearfully
- fearless
- fearlessly
- for fear of
- in fear of -
2 dread
nagyrabecsülés, rettegés, rettegett, tisztelet to dread: aggódik, retteg, megrettent* * *[dred] 1. noun(great fear: She lives in dread of her child being drowned in the canal; His voice was husky with dread.) félelem2. verb(to fear greatly: We were dreading his arrival.) retteg- dreadful- dreadfulness
- dreadfully -
3 terrible
['terəbl]1) (very bad: a terrible singer; That music is terrible!) iszonyú2) (causing great pain, suffering, hardship etc: War is terrible; It was a terrible disaster.) irtózatos3) (causing great fear or horror: The noise of the guns was terrible.) félelmetes•- terribly -
4 horror
hidegrázás, borzalom, borzongás, iszonyatosság* * *['horə]1) (great fear or dislike: She has a horror of spiders; She looked at me in horror.) rettegés2) (a disagreeable person or thing: Her little boy is an absolute horror.) rémség•- horrible- horribleness
- horribly
- horrid
- horrific
- horrify
- horrifying -
5 panic
fejvesztettség, pánik, köles, zűrzavar, páni to panic: fejvesztetten kapkod, zűrzavart okoz, őrületbe hoz* * *['pænik] 1. noun((a) sudden great fear, especially that spreads through a crowd etc: The fire caused a panic in the city.) pánik2. verb(to make or become so frightened that one loses the power to think clearly: He panicked at the sight of the audience.) pánikba esik- panicky -
6 terror
rémület, rettegés* * *['terə]1) (very great fear: She screamed with/in terror; She has a terror of spiders.) rémület2) (something which makes one very afraid: The terrors of war.) terror, rémuralom3) (a troublesome person, especially a child: That child is a real terror!) rémkép•- terrorist
- terrorize
- terrorise
- terrorization
- terrorisation
- terror-stricken -
7 terror-stricken
adjective (feeling very great fear: The children were terror-stricken.) megrémült -
8 cloud
árnyék, folt, felhő, felleg to cloud: elhomályosul, felhőbe borít, beborul* * *1.1) (a mass of tiny drops of water floating in the sky: white clouds in a blue sky; The hills were hidden in cloud.)2) (a great number or quantity of anything small moving together: a cloud of flies.)3) (something causing fear, depression etc: a cloud of sadness.)2. verb1) ((often with over) to become cloudy: The sky clouded over and it began to rain.) beborul2) (to (cause to) become blurred or not clear: Her eyes were clouded with tears.) elhomályosul3) (to (cause to) become gloomy or troubled: His face clouded at the unhappy news.) elkomorul•- cloudy
- cloudburst
- under a cloud -
9 frenzy
dühöngés, őrjöngés* * *['frenzi]plural - frenzies; noun(a state of great excitement, fear etc: She waited in a frenzy of anxiety.) őrjöngés- frenzied- frenziedly
См. также в других словарях:
great fear — index panic Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Great Fear — The Great Fear ( fr. la Grande Peur) occurred from July 20 to August 5, 1789 in France at the start of the French Revolution. Rural unrest had been present in France since the worsening grain shortage of the spring, and the grain supplies were… … Wikipedia
great fear — awesome fear, terrible fright … English contemporary dictionary
Great Fear — (1789) In the French Revolution, a period of panic and riot by peasants and others amid rumors of an aristocratic conspiracy by the king and the privileged to overthrow the Third Estate. The gathering of troops around Paris provoked insurrection … Universalium
Fear — Fear, n. [OE. fer, feer, fere, AS. f[=ae]r a coming suddenly upon, fear, danger; akin to D. vaar, OHG. f[=a]ra danger, G. gefahr, Icel. f[=a]r harm, mischief, plague, and to E. fare, peril. See {Fare}.] 1. A painful emotion or passion excited by… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fear\ and\ trembling — • fear and trembling • fear and trepidation n. phr. Great fear. He came in fear and trembling to tell his father he had a bad report card … Словарь американских идиом
fear\ and\ trepidation — • fear and trembling • fear and trepidation n. phr. Great fear. He came in fear and trembling to tell his father he had a bad report card … Словарь американских идиом
great — greatness, n. /grayt/, adj., greater, greatest, adv., n., pl. greats, (esp. collectively) great, interj. adj. 1. unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city … Universalium
fear and trembling — or[fear and trepidation] {n. phr.} Great fear. * /He came in fear and trembling to tell his father he had a bad report card./ … Dictionary of American idioms
fear and trembling — or[fear and trepidation] {n. phr.} Great fear. * /He came in fear and trembling to tell his father he had a bad report card./ … Dictionary of American idioms
Fear Itself (comics) — Fear Itself Promotional image by Stuart Immonen. Publisher Marvel Comics Publication date April – October 2011 … Wikipedia