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horror

  • 1 horror

    ['horə]
    1) (great fear or dislike: She has a horror of spiders; She looked at me in horror.) τρόμος,φρίκη
    2) (a disagreeable person or thing: Her little boy is an absolute horror.) τέρας
    - horribleness
    - horribly
    - horrid
    - horrific
    - horrify
    - horrifying

    English-Greek dictionary > horror

  • 2 Horror

    subs.
    Fear: P. and V. φόβος, ὁ, ὀρρωδία, ἡ, δέος, τό, δεῖμα, τό, V. τάρβος, τό.
    Shock: P. and V. ἔκπληξις, ἡ.
    Shudder: P. and V. τρόμος, ὁ (Plat.), φρκη, ἡ.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Horror

  • 3 horror

    φρίκη

    English-Greek new dictionary > horror

  • 4 sensational

    1) (causing great excitement or horror: a sensational piece of news.) εντυπωσιακός,πολύκροτος,που προκαλεί αίσθηση
    2) (very good: The film was sensational.) καταπληκτικός
    3) (intended to create feelings of excitement, horror etc: That magazine is too sensational for me.) με στόχο τον εντυπωσιασμό

    English-Greek dictionary > sensational

  • 5 aghast

    (struck with horror: She was aghast at the mess.) εμβρόντητος

    English-Greek dictionary > aghast

  • 6 assume

    [ə'sju:m]
    1) (to take or accept as true: I assume (that) you'd like time to decide.) υποθέτω, συμπεραίνω
    2) (to take upon oneself or accept (authority, responsibility etc): He assumed the rôle of leader in the emergency.) αναλαμβάνω
    3) (to put on (a particular appearance etc): He assumed a look of horror.) παίρνω (συγκεκριμένη) μορφή
    - assumption

    English-Greek dictionary > assume

  • 7 horrible

    English-Greek dictionary > horrible

  • 8 horrid

    English-Greek dictionary > horrid

  • 9 macabre

    (weird, unearthly or horrible: macabre horror stories.) μακάβριος

    English-Greek dictionary > macabre

  • 10 mock

    [mok] 1. verb
    (to laugh at or cause to seem ridiculous: They mocked her efforts at cooking.) κοροϊδεύω,περιπαίζω
    2. adjective
    (pretended or not real: a mock battle; He looked at me in mock horror.) ψεύτικος,προσποιητός
    - mocking
    - mockingly

    English-Greek dictionary > mock

  • 11 morbid

    ['mo:(r)bid]
    (sick (in the way one shows his/her excessive interest in death, disease, cruel acts etc): his morbid fascination with horror films; her morbid imagination.) νοσηρός

    English-Greek dictionary > morbid

  • 12 movie

    [-vi]
    1) (a cinema film: a horror movie.) ταινία
    2) ((in plural: with the) the cinema and films in general: to go to the movies.) κινηματογράφος

    English-Greek dictionary > movie

  • 13 mute

    [mju:t]
    1) (unable to speak; dumb.) μουγγός
    2) (silent: She gazed at him in mute horror.) άφωνος,βουβός
    3) ((of a letter) not sounded in certain words: The word `dumb' has a mute `b' at the end.) άφωνος,μη προφερόμενος

    English-Greek dictionary > mute

  • 14 recoil

    1. [rə'koil] verb
    1) (to move back or away, usually quickly, in horror or fear: He recoiled at/from the sight of the murdered child.) τραβιέμαι, κάνω πίσω
    2) ((of guns when fired) to jump back.) `κλωτσώ`, τινάζομαι προς τα πίσω
    2. ['ri:koil] noun
    (the act of recoiling.)

    English-Greek dictionary > recoil

  • 15 regard

    1. verb
    1) ((with as) to consider to be: I regard his conduct as totally unacceptable.) θεωρώ
    2) (to think of as being very good, important etc; to respect: He is very highly regarded by his friends.) βλέπω, θεωρώ
    3) (to think of (with a particular emotion or feeling): I regard him with horror; He regards his wife's behaviour with amusement.) αναλογίζομαι
    4) (to look at: He regarded me over the top of his glasses.) αφορώ
    5) (to pay attention to (advice etc).) δίνω σημασία, υπολογίζω
    2. noun
    1) (thought; attention: He ran into the burning house without regard for his safety.) προσοχή, μέριμνα
    2) (sympathy; care; consideration: He shows no regard for other people.) έγνοια
    3) (good opinion; respect: I hold him in high regard.) εκτίμηση
    - regardless
    - regards
    - as regards
    - with regard to

    English-Greek dictionary > regard

  • 16 sensation

    [sen'seiʃən]
    1) (the ability to feel through the sense of touch: Cold can cause a loss of sensation in the fingers and toes.) αίσθηση
    2) (a feeling: a sensation of faintness.) αίσθημα,αίσθηση
    3) (a general feeling, or a cause, of excitement or horror: The murder caused a sensation; His arrest was the sensation of the week.) αίσθημα,εντύπωση,ντόρος
    - sensationally

    English-Greek dictionary > sensation

  • 17 shocking

    1) (causing horror or dismay: shocking news.) φρικτός/συγκλονιστικός
    2) (very bad: a shocking cold.) απαίσιος

    English-Greek dictionary > shocking

  • 18 shudder

    1. verb
    (to tremble from fear, disgust, cold etc.) ριγώ
    2. noun
    (an act of trembling in this way: a shudder of horror.)

    English-Greek dictionary > shudder

  • 19 terrible

    ['terəbl]
    1) (very bad: a terrible singer; That music is terrible!) φοβερός, απαίσιος
    2) (causing great pain, suffering, hardship etc: War is terrible; It was a terrible disaster.) φοβερός
    3) (causing great fear or horror: The noise of the guns was terrible.) τρομαχτικός

    English-Greek dictionary > terrible

  • 20 the shivers

    (a feeling of horror: The thought of working for him gives me the shivers.) ρίγος,ανατριχίλα

    English-Greek dictionary > the shivers

См. также в других словарях:

  • Horror — Horror …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • Horror-fi — is a film sub genre that combines elements of the science fiction film and the horror film. The term Horror Fi can also apply to films that feature a horror premise along with the physical and visual trappings of science fiction film.… …   Wikipedia

  • Horror — may refer to:* Horror (album), by Cannae * Horror (With Blood Comes Cleansing album) *Horror and terror, a Gothic literature and film technique *Horror fiction *Horror film * The Horror , an album by RJD2 …   Wikipedia

  • horror — sustantivo masculino 1. (no contable) Miedo muy grande e intenso: El grito la dejó petrificado de horror. Enmudeció de horror. Sinónimo: terror. 2. Uso/registro: coloquial. Pragmática: intensificador. Cosa que desagrada o disgusta …   Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española

  • Horror — (von lat. horror „Schrecken“, „Abscheu“, „Grausen“, „Zittern“, „Starren“) steht für: ein Gefühl des Unheimlichen, siehe auch Grauen Horrorliteratur, ein Literatur Genre Horrorfilm, ein Film Genre Horrorpunk, ein Musik Genre Survival Horror, ein… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Horror — Horror: Das Fremdwort steht einerseits für »Abscheu, Widerwille«, andererseits für »Entsetzen, angsterfüllter Zustand«, wobei das Wort je nach Bedeutung auf zwei unterschiedlichen Wegen ins Deutsche gelangt ist. In beiden Bedeutungen geht es… …   Das Herkunftswörterbuch

  • horror — [hôr′ər, här′ər] n. [ME horrour < OFr < L horror < horrere, to bristle: see HORRID] 1. Obs. a shuddering 2. the strong feeling caused by something frightful or shocking; shuddering fear and disgust; terror and repugnance 3. strong… …   English World dictionary

  • Horror — Hor ror, n. [Formerly written horrour.] [L. horror, fr. horrere to bristle, to shiver, to tremble with cold or dread, to be dreadful or terrible; cf. Skr. h?sh to bristle.] 1. A bristling up; a rising into roughness; tumultuous movement.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • horror — I {{/stl 13}}{{stl 8}}rz. mnż I, D. u, Mc. horrororze {{/stl 8}}{{stl 20}} {{/stl 20}}{{stl 12}}1. {{/stl 12}}{{stl 7}} gatunek powieści, sztuki teatralnej, filmu, mający wywołać grozę, strach, dreszcz emocji : {{/stl 7}}{{stl 10}}Horrory… …   Langenscheidt Polski wyjaśnień

  • Horror — Sm Schrecken erw. fremd. Erkennbar fremd (18. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt und relatinisiert aus frz. horreur f., dieses aus l. horror, einer Ableitung von l. horrēre schauern, sich entsetzen . Im 20. Jh. auch unter dem Einfluß von ne. horror. Dazu… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • horror — (n.) early 14c., from O.Fr. horror (12c., Mod.Fr. horreur) and directly from L. horror dread, veneration, religious awe, a figurative use, lit. a shaking, trembling, shudder, chill, from horrere to bristle with fear, shudder, from PIE root *ghers …   Etymology dictionary

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