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  1. Dictionary
    fright
    /frʌɪt/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. frighten: archaic "come, be comforted, he shan't fright you"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. FRIGHT definition: 1. the feeling of fear, especially if felt suddenly, or an experience of fear that happens…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of FRIGHT is fear excited by sudden danger : alarm. How to use fright in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Fright.

  4. Fright is a feeling of fear, dread, or terror. You might scream in fright while watching a scary movie or riding a roller coaster. Some fright is so intense that it makes you jump; other fright is caused by anticipating something vaguely scary, like a trip to the dentist or an encounter with your mean neighbor after your baseball breaks her window.

  5. Fright definition: sudden and extreme fear; a sudden terror.. See examples of FRIGHT used in a sentence.

  6. Fright is a sudden feeling of fear, especially the fear that you feel when something unpleasant surprises you. The steam pipes rattled suddenly, and Franklin uttered a shriek and jumped with fright. The birds smashed into the top of their cages in fright.

  7. the feeling of fear, especially if felt suddenly, or an experience of fear that happens suddenly: I lay in bed shaking with fright. give someone a fright You gave her such a fright turning the lights out like that. the fright of someone’s life You gave me the fright of my life (= a very severe fright), jumping out of the shadows like that!

  8. Jun 2, 2024 · fright. fright ( countable and uncountable, plural frights) A state of terror excited by the sudden appearance of danger; sudden and violent fear, usually of short duration; a sudden alarm . Someone strange, ugly or shocking, producing a feeling of alarm or aversion .

  9. n. 1. sudden intense fear or alarm. 2. a sudden alarming shock. 3. informal a horrifying, grotesque, or ludicrous person or thing: she looks a fright in that hat. 4. take fright to become frightened. vb. a poetic word for frighten. [Old English fryhto; related to Gothic faurhtei, Old Frisian fruchte, Old High German forhta]

  10. fright a feeling of fear, usually sudden: She cried out in fright. fear or fright? Fright is a reaction to something that has just happened or is happening now. Use fear, but not fright, to talk about things that always frighten you and things that may happen in the future: I have a fright of spiders. • his fright of what might happen Patterns

  11. Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023 How to use fright in a sentence Finally he grabs that blanket [and] I counted eight on one double mattress, eight children held together—dying of fright .