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scare

verb

  1. (cause to) become afraid, afraid
  2. to scare into motion or action
L12143 on Wikidata ↗

noun

  1. episode of being frightened
L12144 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /skɛə/ / /skɛɚ/ / /skɪə(ɹ)/

adj

  1. lean; scanty

noun

Etymology: From Middle English sker, skere (“terror, fright”), from the verb Middle English skerren (“to frighten”) (see below).

  1. A minor fright.

    Johnny had a bad scare last night.

    England were held to a draw after surviving a major scare against Switzerland as they were forced to come from two goals behind to earn a point in the Euro 2012 qualifier at Wembley.

  2. A cause of terror or alarm; a panic; something that inspires fear or dread.

    a food-poisoning scare

  3. A device or object used to frighten.

    But I admit the possibility of their being used as "scares" for either birds of prey or snakes, or both.

verb

Etymology: From Middle English scaren, skaren, scarren, skeren, skerren, from Old Norse skirra (“to frighten; to shrink away from, shun; to prevent, avert”), from Proto-Germanic *skirzijaną (“to shoo, scare off”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ker- (“to swing, jump, move”). Related to Old Norse skjarr (“timid, shy, afraid of”). Cognate with Scots skar (“wild, timid, shy”), dialectal Norwegian Nynorsk skjerra, dialectal Swedish skjarra and possibly Old Armenian ցիռ (cʻiṙ, “wild ass”).

  1. To frighten, terrify, startle, especially in a minor way.

    Did it scare you when I said "Boo!"?

    That cannot be; the noise of thy crossbow / Will scare the herd, and so my shoot is lost.

  2. (To be able) to be scared.

    I don't scare easily.