Dread
81dread — [12] Old English had the verb ondrǣdan ‘fear’. Its first syllable is generally taken to be the prefix *and ‘against’, which is related to German ent ‘away, un ’ and Greek anti (source of English anti ) and appears also in English answer. The… …
82dread — See: burnt child dreads the fire …
83dread — I. , sb. RG. 401, 457 II. , v. n. pret. ‘dradde.’ 127 B …
84dread — dred n. fear, terror, horror v. fear, be afraid; be anxious about; hold in awe, respect greatly …
85dread — • feeling dreadful. I feel dred man . Also a Rastafarian term used to describe something impressive or cool …
86dread — 1) dared 2) adder …
87dread — verb 1》 anticipate with great apprehension or fear. 2》 archaic regard with great awe. noun 1》 great fear or apprehension. 2》 (dreads) informal dreadlocks. 3》 a sudden take off of a flock of birds. adjective 1》 greatly feared; dreadful. 2》 archaic …
88dread — I. n. 1. Fear, apprehension, terror. 2. Awe, veneration. II. a. 1. Frightful, terrible, horrible, dreadful. 2. Venerable, awful. III. v. a. Fear greatly …
89dread — v 1. fear, be afraid, worry, Inf. funk, mistrust, distrust, suspect, anticipate, expect, apprehend, forebode; hesitate, falter, have second thoughts, have cold feet; quail, flinch, recoil, shy, shrink; cower, skulk, crouch; shiver, shake, shudder …
90dread — Страх …