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41 dread
فَزَعٌ \ alarm: fear of possible danger: The sound of a shot filled her with alarm. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. scare: a feeling of fear, often widespread and unnecessary: a war scare (a frightening report of possible war). \ See Also رعب (رُعْب)، هلع (هَلَع)، ذعر (ذُعْر) -
42 fright
فَزَعٌ \ alarm: fear of possible danger: The sound of a shot filled her with alarm. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. scare: a feeling of fear, often widespread and unnecessary: a war scare (a frightening report of possible war). \ See Also رعب (رُعْب)، هلع (هَلَع)، ذعر (ذُعْر) -
43 horror
فَزَعٌ \ alarm: fear of possible danger: The sound of a shot filled her with alarm. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. scare: a feeling of fear, often widespread and unnecessary: a war scare (a frightening report of possible war). \ See Also رعب (رُعْب)، هلع (هَلَع)، ذعر (ذُعْر) -
44 scare
فَزَعٌ \ alarm: fear of possible danger: The sound of a shot filled her with alarm. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. scare: a feeling of fear, often widespread and unnecessary: a war scare (a frightening report of possible war). \ See Also رعب (رُعْب)، هلع (هَلَع)، ذعر (ذُعْر) -
45 dismay
هَلَع \ dismay: a feeling of surprise, mixed with fear of hopelessness: He discovered with dismay that the telephone wasn’t working, and he couldn’t call the doctor. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. panic: wild fear that makes people act madly. -
46 dread
هَلَع \ dismay: a feeling of surprise, mixed with fear of hopelessness: He discovered with dismay that the telephone wasn’t working, and he couldn’t call the doctor. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. panic: wild fear that makes people act madly. -
47 fright
هَلَع \ dismay: a feeling of surprise, mixed with fear of hopelessness: He discovered with dismay that the telephone wasn’t working, and he couldn’t call the doctor. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. panic: wild fear that makes people act madly. -
48 horror
هَلَع \ dismay: a feeling of surprise, mixed with fear of hopelessness: He discovered with dismay that the telephone wasn’t working, and he couldn’t call the doctor. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. panic: wild fear that makes people act madly. -
49 panic
هَلَع \ dismay: a feeling of surprise, mixed with fear of hopelessness: He discovered with dismay that the telephone wasn’t working, and he couldn’t call the doctor. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. horror: great fear and dislike: I have a horror of snakes. panic: wild fear that makes people act madly. -
50 verraten
(unreg.)I v/t1. (Freunde, Ideale etc.) betray, give away; (Geheimnis) auch divulge; (jemanden) auch sell umg.; verraten und verkauft sein umg. have been sold down the river2. (ausplaudern) blab out umg.; fig. (offenbaren) betray (auch jemandes Nervosität), reveal; (preisgeben) auch give away; sein Blick verriet große Angst great fear was revealed in his eyes; nicht verraten! don’t tell!; das darfst du Mutter nicht verraten you mustn’t tell Mother about that; sein Akzent hat ihn verraten his accent betrayed him ( oder gave him away)3. umg. (mitteilen) tell; kannst du mir verraten, warum...? umg. can you tell me why...?; sie hat mir ihre Absichten nicht verraten she didn’t tell me her intentionsII v/refl give o.s. away (durch etw. by s.th.)* * *to reveal; to betray* * *ver|ra|ten ptp verraten irreg1. vt1) Geheimnis, Absicht, jdn to betray, to give away; (= bekannt geben, ausplaudern) to tell; (fig = erkennen lassen) to reveal, to shownichts verráten! — don't say a word!
er hat es verráten — he let it out
2) Freunde, Vaterland, gute Sache etc to betray (an +acc to)verráten und verkauft (inf) — well and truly sunk (inf)
2. vrto give oneself away, to betray oneself* * *1) (to act disloyally or treacherously towards (especially a person who trusts one): He betrayed his own brother (to the enemy).) betray2) (to show (signs of): Her pale face betrayed her fear.) betray3) (to betray: The gang was sold down the river by one of its associates.) sell down the river4) (to give information about (a person, usually if they are doing something wrong): I'm late for work - don't tell on me!) tell on5) (to give away a secret: You mustn't tell or we'll get into trouble.) tell* * *ver·ra·ten<verriet, verraten>I. vtnichts \verraten! keep it to yourself!, don't give anything away!▪ jdn \verraten to betray sb3. (preisgeben)▪ etw \verraten to betray sthseine Meinung nicht \verraten wollen to be reluctant to express one's opinion [or view▪ etw \verraten to show sth, to make sth clear [or obvious6.II. vr* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) betray <person, cause>; betray, give away <secret, plan, etc.> (an + Akk. to)verraten und verkauft sein — be well and truly in the soup (fig. coll.) or (coll.) sunk
2) (ugs.): (mitteilen)jemandem den Grund usw. verraten — tell somebody the reason etc.
3) (erkennen lassen) show, betray <feelings, surprise, fear, etc.>; show <influence, talent>4) (zu erkennen geben) give < person> away2.1) < person> give oneself away2) (sich zeigen) show itself; be revealed* * *verraten (irr)A. v/tverraten und verkauft sein umg have been sold down the river2. (ausplaudern) blab out umg; fig (offenbaren) betray (auch jemandes Nervosität), reveal; (preisgeben) auch give away;sein Blick verriet große Angst great fear was revealed in his eyes;nicht verraten! don’t tell!;das darfst du Mutter nicht verraten you mustn’t tell Mother about that;sein Akzent hat ihn verraten his accent betrayed him ( oder gave him away)3. umg (mitteilen) tell;kannst du mir verraten, warum …? umg can you tell me why …?;sie hat mir ihre Absichten nicht verraten she didn’t tell me her intentionsB. v/r give o.s. away (durch etwas by sth)* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) betray <person, cause>; betray, give away <secret, plan, etc.> (an + Akk. to)verraten und verkauft sein — be well and truly in the soup (fig. coll.) or (coll.) sunk
2) (ugs.): (mitteilen)jemandem den Grund usw. verraten — tell somebody the reason etc.
3) (erkennen lassen) show, betray <feelings, surprise, fear, etc.>; show <influence, talent>4) (zu erkennen geben) give < person> away2.1) < person> give oneself away2) (sich zeigen) show itself; be revealed* * *adj.betrayed adj. v.to betray v. -
51 dread
1. transitive verbsich sehr fürchten vor (+ Dat.)2. noun, no pl.I dread to think [what may have happened] — ich mag gar nicht daran denken[, was passiert sein könnte]
(terror) Angst, die* * *[dred] 1. noun(great fear: She lives in dread of her child being drowned in the canal; His voice was husky with dread.) die Furcht2. verb(to fear greatly: We were dreading his arrival.) sich fürchten- academic.ru/22316/dreadful">dreadful- dreadfulness
- dreadfully* * *[dred]I. vt1. (fear greatly)▪ to \dread doing sth große Angst haben, etw zu tunI \dread to think what would happen if... ich wage gar nicht daran zu denken, was geschehen würde, wenn...2. (look forward to with fear)he's \dreading his driving test er hat Angst vor der Fahrprüfung▪ to \dread doing sth Angst davor haben, etw zu tunto fill sb with \dread jdn mit Angst und Schrecken erfüllenthe \dread spectre of civil war das Schreckgespenst eines Bürgerkrieges* * *[dred]1. vtsich fürchten vor (+dat), große Angst haben vor (+dat)I'm dreading Christmas this year — dieses Jahr graut es mir schon vor Weihnachten
and now the dreaded moment, here are the exam results — der mit Schrecken erwartete Augenblick ist da, hier sind die Examensergebnisse
I dread to think what may happen — ich wage nicht daran zu denken, was passieren könnte
I dread or I'm dreading seeing her again — ich denke mit Schrecken an ein Wiedersehen mit ihr
he dreads going to the dentist — er hat schreckliche Angst davor, zum Zahnarzt zu gehen
2. nthe thought filled me with dread — bei dem Gedanken wurde mir angst und bange
to live in dread of being found out — in ständiger Angst davor leben, entdeckt zu werden
3. adj (liter)gefürchtet* * *dread [dred]A v/t1. etwas, jemanden sehr fürchten, sich fürchten (to do, doing zu tun), (große) Angst haben vor (dat), sich fürchten vor (dat):I dread to think what … ich mag gar nicht daran denken, was …2. obs Ehrfurcht haben vor (dat)B sof vor dat;of doing zu tun):suffer from (a) dread of heights Höhenangst haben2. obs Ehrfurcht f3. jemand oder etwas, vor dem man (große) Angst hat:illness is the great dread of his life am meisten fürchtet er sich vor Krankheiten* * *1. transitive verbsich sehr fürchten vor (+ Dat.)the dreaded day/moment — der gefürchtete Tag/Augenblick
2. noun, no pl.I dread to think [what may have happened] — ich mag gar nicht daran denken[, was passiert sein könnte]
(terror) Angst, diebe or live in dread of something/somebody — in [ständiger] Furcht vor etwas/jemandem leben
* * *n.Furcht f. v.fürchten v. -
52 dread
[dred] 1. noun(great fear: She lives in dread of her child being drowned in the canal; His voice was husky with dread.) frygt; rædsel; skræk2. verb(to fear greatly: We were dreading his arrival.) frygte; grue for- dreadful- dreadfulness
- dreadfully* * *[dred] 1. noun(great fear: She lives in dread of her child being drowned in the canal; His voice was husky with dread.) frygt; rædsel; skræk2. verb(to fear greatly: We were dreading his arrival.) frygte; grue for- dreadful- dreadfulness
- dreadfully -
53 Entsetzen
I v/t2. MIL. (Festung, Truppen) relieveII v/refl vor Grauen etc.: be horrified ( oder appalled) ( über + Akk at, by), react with horror (to); bei Gefahr: be terrified (by); (bestürzt sein) be shocked (at, by), be dismayed (by); moralisch: be shocked (at, by)* * *das Entsetzenterror; horror* * *Ent|sẹt|zen [Ent'zɛtsn]nt -s, no plhorror; (= Bestürzung auch) dismay; (= Erschrecken) terrorvon Entsetzen erfasst or ergriffen or gepackt werden — to be seized with horror/dismay/terror, to be horror-stricken
zu meinem größten Entsetzen bemerkte ich, dass... — to my horror or great dismay I noticed that...
mit Entsetzen sehen/hören, dass... — to be horrified/dismayed/terrified to see/hear that...
* * *1) (to horrify or shock: We were appalled by the bomb damage.) appal2) (to shock greatly: Mrs Smith was horrified to find that her son had a tattooed chest.) horrify4) (very great fear: She screamed with/in terror; She has a terror of spiders.) terror* * *Ent·set·zen<-s>nt kein pl (Erschrecken) horror, dismayvoller \Entsetzen filled with horror [or dismay], horror-struck [or -stricken]mit \Entsetzen horrified, dismayed[bleich/kreideweiß/versteinert] vor \Entsetzen [pale/as white as a sheet/petrified] with horrorzu jds [großen [o größten]] \Entsetzen to sb's [great] horror [or dismay]* * *das; Entsetzens horrorer bemerkte mit Entsetzen, dass... — he noticed to his horror that...
* * *Entsetzen n; -s, kein pl; (Schrecken) horror; (Erschrecken) terror; (Bestürzung) (utter) dismay, shock;* * *das; Entsetzens horrorer bemerkte mit Entsetzen, dass... — he noticed to his horror that...
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54 entsetzen
I v/t2. MIL. (Festung, Truppen) relieveII v/refl vor Grauen etc.: be horrified ( oder appalled) ( über + Akk at, by), react with horror (to); bei Gefahr: be terrified (by); (bestürzt sein) be shocked (at, by), be dismayed (by); moralisch: be shocked (at, by)* * *das Entsetzenterror; horror* * *Ent|sẹt|zen [Ent'zɛtsn]nt -s, no plhorror; (= Bestürzung auch) dismay; (= Erschrecken) terrorvon Entsetzen erfasst or ergriffen or gepackt werden — to be seized with horror/dismay/terror, to be horror-stricken
zu meinem größten Entsetzen bemerkte ich, dass... — to my horror or great dismay I noticed that...
mit Entsetzen sehen/hören, dass... — to be horrified/dismayed/terrified to see/hear that...
* * *1) (to horrify or shock: We were appalled by the bomb damage.) appal2) (to shock greatly: Mrs Smith was horrified to find that her son had a tattooed chest.) horrify4) (very great fear: She screamed with/in terror; She has a terror of spiders.) terror* * *Ent·set·zen<-s>nt kein pl (Erschrecken) horror, dismayvoller \Entsetzen filled with horror [or dismay], horror-struck [or -stricken]mit \Entsetzen horrified, dismayed[bleich/kreideweiß/versteinert] vor \Entsetzen [pale/as white as a sheet/petrified] with horrorzu jds [großen [o größten]] \Entsetzen to sb's [great] horror [or dismay]* * *das; Entsetzens horrorer bemerkte mit Entsetzen, dass... — he noticed to his horror that...
* * *A. v/tüber +akk at, by), react with horror (to); bei Gefahr: be terrified (by); (bestürzt sein) be shocked (at, by), be dismayed (by); moralisch: be shocked (at, by)* * *das; Entsetzens horrorer bemerkte mit Entsetzen, dass... — he noticed to his horror that...
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55 terrible
['terəbl]1) (very bad: a terrible singer; That music is terrible!) forfærdelig; grusom2) (causing great pain, suffering, hardship etc: War is terrible; It was a terrible disaster.) grusom3) (causing great fear or horror: The noise of the guns was terrible.) forfærdelig•- terribly* * *['terəbl]1) (very bad: a terrible singer; That music is terrible!) forfærdelig; grusom2) (causing great pain, suffering, hardship etc: War is terrible; It was a terrible disaster.) grusom3) (causing great fear or horror: The noise of the guns was terrible.) forfærdelig•- terribly -
56 περιδείδια
Aπεριδείδιθι Hsch.
: [tense] aor. 1 περίδεισα, Hom. (only in Il.) always in forms with 7, for περίδϝεισαϝ, περιδϝείσασα, etc. (v. infr.):— to be in great fear or dread about, c. gen., αἰνῶς γὰρ Δαναῶν π. Il. l.c., cf. 17.240: c. dat., to be in great fear for, ;Αἴαντι περιδείσαντες 23.822
;τῷ ῥα περίδεισαν 11.508
;ἐμῇ κεφαλῇ περιδείδια, μή τι πάθῃσιν 17.242
; περιδείσασ' Ἀχιλῆϊ, μὴ .. 21.328 : c. inf., fear greatly to do, A.R.2.1203 : c. acc.,γαλέην περιδείδια Batr. 51
.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > περιδείδια
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57 ذعر
ذُعْر \ alarm: fear of possible danger: The sound of a shot filled her with alarm. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. panic: wild fear that makes people act madly. scare: a feeling of fear, often widespread and unnecessary: a war scare (a frightening report of possible war). terror: great fear. \ ذُعْرٌ وهَرَبٌ مُفاجئ (لجماعةٍ من الناس أو الحيوانات) \ stampede: a sudden rush of frightened animals or people. -
58 رهبة
رَهْبَة \ awe: a feeling of fear, respect, and wonder: The villagers looked with awe at the buildings in the great city. dread: great fear, esp. of some harm to come: She has (a) great dread of heights. phobia. \ See Also رُهاب -
59 alarm
ذُعْر \ alarm: fear of possible danger: The sound of a shot filled her with alarm. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. panic: wild fear that makes people act madly. scare: a feeling of fear, often widespread and unnecessary: a war scare (a frightening report of possible war). terror: great fear. -
60 fright
ذُعْر \ alarm: fear of possible danger: The sound of a shot filled her with alarm. fright: sudden fear; shock: He almost died of fright when the gun exploded. It gave him a fright. panic: wild fear that makes people act madly. scare: a feeling of fear, often widespread and unnecessary: a war scare (a frightening report of possible war). terror: great fear.
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