horrors

listen to the pronunciation of horrors
Englisch - Türkisch
hayal görme/dehşet
horror
{i} korku

Kelimeler hissettiğim korkuyu anlatamaz. - Words cannot describe the horror I felt.

Birisi onun kolundan tuttuğunda o korkudan çığlık attı. - She screamed with horror as someone took hold of her arm.

horror
{i} dehşet

Tom savaşın dehşetini asla unutamadı. - Tom could never forget the horror of the war.

Tom dehşet içinde çığlık attı. - Tom screamed in horror.

horror
korkutucu

Bu korku filmi gerçekten korkutucu.Ben izledikten sonra uyuyamadım. - This horror movie is really scary. I couldn't sleep after I watched it.

horror
{i} nefret

Korku filmlerinden nefret ederim. - I hate horror movies.

Korku filmlerinden nefret ederler. - They hate horror films.

chamber of horrors
Korku tüneli
horror
dili dehşet veya korku buhranı
horror
the horrors k
horror
{i} iğrenç kimse
horror
{i} dehşet, yılgı, korku
horror
çok içki içenlerde bazen görülen korku nöbeti
horror
{i} nefret edilen şey
horror
(Tıp) Ürperme, titreme
Englisch - Englisch
{i} extreme nervous depression, severe anxiety (Informal); delirium tremens
plural of horror
horror
An intense painful emotion of fear or repugnance
horror
(The horrors, informal) An intense anxiety or a nervous depression
horror
A literary genre, generally of a gothic character
horror
An intense dislike or aversion; an abhorrence
horror
{n} terror, dread, dreariness
chamber of horrors
A place of entertainment containing instruments or scenes of torture or execution (from the name given to a room in Madame Tussaud's waxwork exhibition)
Bulgarian Horrors
Atrocities committed by the Ottoman empire in subduing the Bulgarian rebellion of 1876. The name was used by William E. Gladstone in his pamphlet publicizing the incident. About 15,000 persons were reportedly massacred at Philippopolis (now Plovdiv), and villages and monasteries were destroyed. Despite widespread public indignation, the European powers did little in response. The crisis ended with the Congress of Berlin, which created a small, autonomous principality of Bulgaria
Little Shop of Horrors
title of both a movie and a Broadway stage musical
horror
An intense anxiety or a nervous depression
horror
You can refer to an account of a very unpleasant experience or event as a horror story. a horror story about lost luggage while flying
horror
You can refer to extremely unpleasant or frightening experiences as horrors. Can you possibly imagine all the horrors we have undergone since I last wrote you?
horror
{i} terror, fear; dismay, shock; atrocity, abomination, something horrible
horror
Horror is a feeling of great shock, fear, and worry caused by something extremely unpleasant. As I watched in horror the boat began to power away from me. = terror
horror
A shaking, shivering, or shuddering, as in the cold fit which precedes a fever; in old medical writings, a chill of less severity than a rigor, and more marked than an algor
horror
That which excites horror or dread, or is horrible; gloom; dreariness
horror
something that inspires horror; something horrible; "the painting that others found so beautiful was a horror to him"
horror
A bristling up; a rising into roughness; tumultuous movement
horror
intense and profound fear
horror
intense aversion
horror
A horror film or story is intended to be very frightening. a psychological horror film
horror
A painful emotion of fear, dread, and abhorrence; a shuddering with terror and detestation; the feeling inspired by something frightful and shocking
horror
If you have a horror of something, you are afraid of it or dislike it very much. his horror of death
horror
The horror of something, especially something that hurts people, is its very great unpleasantness. the horror of this most bloody of civil wars
horror
something that inspires horror; something horrible; "the painting that others found so beautiful was a horror to him" intense and profound fear
horrors

    Silbentrennung

    hor·rors

    Türkische aussprache

    hôrırz

    Aussprache

    /ˈhôrərz/ /ˈhɔːrɜrz/

    Etymologie

    [ 'hor-&r, 'här- ] (noun.) 14th century. Middle English horrour, from Middle French horror, from Latin, action of bristling, from horrEre to bristle, shiver; akin to Sanskrit harsate he is excited.
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