strike+with+terror

  • 121face — n Face, countenance, visage, physiognomy, mug, puss denote the front part of a human or, sometimes, animal head including the mouth, nose, eyes, forehead, and cheeks. Face is the simple and direct word {your face is dirty} {she struck him in the… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 122Badal Gupta — ( bn. বাদল গুপ্ত Badol Gupto ) (1912 1930) was a Bengali Indian freedom fighter and revolutionary.Early activitiesBadal Gupta was born Sudhir Gupta in the village Purba Shimulia (West Shimulia) in the Bikrampur region of Dhaka, now in Munshiganj… …

    Wikipedia

  • 123Bipartite (theology) — For other uses, see Bipartite (disambiguation). In Christian theology and anthropology, bipartite refers to the view that a human being is a composite of two distinct components, material and immaterial; for example, body and soul. It is… …

    Wikipedia

  • 124Dinesh Gupta — (1911–1931) Dinesh Chandra Gupta (Bengali: দিনেশ চন্দ্র গুপ্ত Dinesh Chôndro Gupto) or Dinesh Gupta (6 December 1911 – 7 July 1931) was a Bengali revolutionary who fought against British colonial rule. Contents 1 …

    Wikipedia

  • 125scare — [c]/skɛə / (say skair) verb (scared, scaring) –verb (t) 1. to strike with sudden fear or terror. –verb (i) 2. to become frightened: that horse scares easily. –noun 3. a sudden fright or alarm, especially with little or no ground. 4. a time or… …

  • 126terrify — v terrorize, fill with terror, consternate, Chiefly Scot. fley, Archaic. affright; scare to death, Sl. scare stiff, Inf. scare or frighten out of one s wits or senses; stun, paralyze, petrify, freeze, strike dumb, put one s heart in one s mouth;… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 127ἐπέπληκτο — ἐπιπλήσσω strike plup ind mp 3rd sg πλήσσω struck with terror plup ind mp 3rd sg …

    Greek morphological index (Ελληνική μορφολογικούς δείκτες)

  • 128shrimp, you —    ‘Shrimp’ has been applied contemptuously to small people since at least the fourteenth century.    Chaucer uses the word in this way in his Monk’s Prologue, while Shakespeare has, in Henry the Sixth    Part One (2:iii):    I thought I should… …

    A dictionary of epithets and terms of address