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 fright [frait]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 惊骇, 吃惊

[医] 惊吓


  1. He gave me a fright by bursting into a sudden laughter.
    他突然大笑起来,吓了我一跳。
  2. The horse took a fright at the sound of the explosion.
    马听到爆炸声受了惊。
  3. He was shaking with fright as if he had seen a ghost.
    他吓得直哆嗦,就好像看见了鬼一样。


fright
[ noun ]
  1. an emotion experienced in anticipation of some specific pain or danger (usually accompanied by a desire to flee or fight)

  2. <noun.feeling>
[ verb ]
  1. cause fear in

  2. <verb.emotion> affright frighten scare
    The stranger who hangs around the building frightens me
    Ghosts could never affright her


Fright \Fright\, v. t. [imp. {Frighted}; p. pr. & vb. n..
{Frighting}.] [OE. frigten to fear, frighten, AS. fyrhtan to
frighten, forhtian to fear; akin to OS. forhtian, OHG.
furihten, forahtan, G. f["u]rchten, Sw. frukta, Dan. frygte,
Goth. faurhtjan. See {Fright}, n., and cf. {Frighten}.]
To alarm suddenly; to shock by causing sudden fear; to
terrify; to scare.

Nor exile or danger can fright a brave spirit.
--Dryden.

Syn: To affright; dismay; daunt; intimidate.


Fright \Fright\ (fr[imac]t), n. [OE. frigt, freyht, AS. fyrhto,
fyrhtu; akin to OS. forhta, OHG. forhta, forahta, G. furcht,
Dan. frygt, Sw. fruktan, Goth. fa['u]rhtei fear, fa['u]rhts
timid.]
1. A state of terror excited by the sudden appearance of
danger; sudden and violent fear, usually of short
duration; a sudden alarm.

2. Anything strange, ugly or shocking, producing a feeling of
alarm or aversion. [Colloq.]

Syn: Alarm; terror; consternation. See {Alarm}.

  1. Then there is Nicaragua, the Mighty Mouse menace that has kept Mr. Reagan and the Washington ideologues in continual fright since 1981.
  2. His knees weak with fright, Bernhardt crossed the strip of land separating the tower from the 10 foot-high steel-mesh fence blocking his way to West Berlin.
  3. He endured two miserable marriages and years of paralyzing stage fright, contemplated murder and suicide and battled his own rages, guilt and drinking.
  4. When I saw that open window, it was complete fright.
  5. Mr. Stone, a Vietnam veteran, vividly portrays the aimless fright of stumbling through the jungle in search of battle.
  6. Suddenly, half Tomkins' sales were in food and it was right in the middle of the bloodiest battlefield of all - bread. The City took fright.
  7. Less than a month ago GRE shares reached a four-year high of 247p. The market took fright at worries that the UK premium rating environment may have peaked and that the composites' earnings may be about to come under pressure.
  8. Tibetans screamed with fright as Chinese troops pulled them from their homes.
  9. He did propose to cut taxes, but only on condition that Congress agreed to some balancing reductions in spending. Explaining why the bond market took fright at the dollar's decline is not easy.
  10. He had crippling bouts of stage fright and contemplated suicide.
  11. If the stock market goes down much further, the world could yet receive a nasty fright.
  12. But while the foreign exchanges took fright and the pound fell to below DM2.47, yields at the short end of the curve fell only 4 basis points. Although the narrow money figure was bad, it was not enough to convince some analysts.
  13. But it is plain to everybody else that I suffer from a tin ear, a froggy voice and acute stage fright.
  14. Shoppers scattered in fright through the narrow, crowded alleys of Nablus' central market when Haniya Swissa was shot at about 11 a.m.
  15. Still, if peace in Northern Ireland gives international investors one less reason to take fright, the market's latest gains should be sustainable.
  16. This video won't keep you on the edge of the sofa, but it's as good as any adventure fright night on commercial TV.
  17. Marc Bohan at Dior branched out into tongue-in-cheek fantasy by pairing a feathery fright wig with all the allure of a jungle "Hottentot" to go with a draped zebra-striped dress.
  18. The fright level in this Michael A. Simpson film, which was written by Fritz Gordon, is not very high.
  19. Additionally, the Bundesbank's moves disrupted bond auctions in France, Spain and Italy - governments with considerable financing needs. For many analysts, this week's bond market fright has been excessive.
  20. Unless American investors take fright at a strengthening dollar and rising US interest rates, UK equities look well underpinned.
  21. "I got a fright, of course.
  22. A bus driver named Bitta said he had not seen "such fright and panic among the people of the area" since the 1971 war.
  23. Three months ago, as the Nikkei first dived, the bond markets took fright at the state of the Japanese financial system. Since then, bond investors have recovered their equanimity.
  24. It is apparently not very serious. The Bundesbank council has departed on holiday too, but only after giving the rest of Europe a fright.
  25. The super rich caught fright and decided they could live without art.
  26. "If I had known I had five bullets in me, I would have died of fright," he said, and laughed.
  27. Children bundle up for classes in temporary, unheated buildings. They wake up crying at night and run from classrooms in fright at the slightest noise.
  28. But experientially they're going to hurt." The challenge for today's fright masters is to snare the mainstream _ not just those who, for lack of anything better to do, love being scared to death.
  29. I had a bit of stage fright the first day or two.
  30. She was not only lightheaded with relief, she was giddy with fright.
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