horror
noun
- IGRC content descriptor
- act or process of filling or causing to fill with apprehension or alarm
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈhɒɹ.ə/ / /ˈhɔɹ.ɚ/ / /ˈhɑɹ.ɚ/
noun
Etymology: From Middle English horer, horrour, from Old French horror, from Latin horror (“a bristling, a shaking, trembling as with cold or fear, terror”), from horrere (“to bristle, shake, be terrified”). Displaced native Old English ōga.
- An intense distressing emotion of fear or repugnance.
“Their swarthy Hosts wou'd darken all our Plains, / Doubling the native Horror of the War, / And making Death more grim.”
- Something horrible; that which excites horror.
“I saw many horrors during the war.”
“The Home Magazine for July (Binghamton and New York) contains ‘The Patriots' War Chant,’ a poem by Douglas Malloch; ‘The Story of the War,’ by Theodore Waters; ‘A Horseman in the Sky,’ by Ambrose Bierce, with a portrait of Mr. Bierce, whose tales of horror are horrible of themselves, not as war is horrible; ‘A Yankee Hero,’ by W. L. Calver; ‘The Warfare of the Future,’ by Louis Seemuller; ‘Florence Nightingale,’ by Susan E. Dickenson, with two rare portraits, etc.”
- Intense dislike or aversion; an abhorrence.
““Mrs. Yule's chagrin and horror at what she called her son's base ingratitude knew no bounds ; at first it was even thought that she would never get over it. […] ””
- A genre of fiction designed to evoke a feeling of fear and suspense.
“Those who enjoy horror, stories overflowing with blood and black mystery, will be grateful to Richard Marsh for writing ‘The Beetle.’”
“A well-received Johnny Fuller R & B horror called "Haunted House."”
- A genre of fiction designed to evoke a feeling of fear and suspense.
- A nasty or ill-behaved person; a rascal or terror.
“The neighbour's kids are a pack of little horrors!”
- An intense anxiety or a nervous depression; often the horrors.
- Delirium tremens.
“`My belief is that he had the horrors without knowin' it.'”