Skip to main content

freaked out

/freek/US // frik //UK // (friːk) //

吓坏了,惊慌失措,惊恐万状,吓坏了的

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : any abnormal phenomenon or product or unusual object; anomaly; aberration.
    • : a person or animal on exhibition as an example of a strange deviation from nature; monster.
    • : a sudden and apparently causeless change or turn of events, the mind, etc.; an apparently capricious notion, occurrence, etc.: That kind of sudden storm is a freak.
    • : Numismatics. an imperfect coin, undetected at the mint and put into circulation.
    • : Philately. a stamp differing from others of the same printing because of creases, dirty engraving plates, etc.Compare error, variety.
    • : Slang. a person who has withdrawn from normal, rational behavior and activities to pursue one interest or obsession: a drug freak.a devoted fan or follower; enthusiast: a baseball freak.a hippie.
    • : Archaic. capriciousness; whimsicality.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : unusual; odd; irregular: a freak epidemic.
  1. 1
    • : to become or make frightened, nervous, or wildly excited: The loud noise caused the horse to freak.
  1. 1
    • : freak out, Slang. to enter into or cause a period of irrational behavior or emotional instability, as under the influence of a drug: to be freaked out on LSD.to lose or cause to lose emotional control from extreme excitement, shock, fear, joy, despair, etc.: Seeing the dead body freaked him out.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Still, fans can’t help but happily freak out that Janet Hubert, the actress who played the original Aunt Viv in the ’90s series, was included in the festivities.

  • Two weeks ago, after freak lightning strikes torched Northern California but before the inferno of Labor Day weekend had begun, a friend called to talk, like you do when the world is turning to crap and nothing is stable or makes sense.

  • In a matter of weeks, California has been hit with two record-breaking heat waves, hundreds of blazes, freak lightning storms and dangerously poor air quality.

  • People freak out if there’s a single bad day whereas in the past there was a little more leniency.

  • People also can’t tell if you have a mask when it’s hiding in your pocket, so you could freak out an immunocompromised hiker or runner.

  • Really, is it any wonder that fluoride should freak people out?

  • They had a freak-out moment and destroyed some source material.

  • I was already a full-blown movie freak by the time I was in 8th grade.

  • And in a culture as paranoid as ours, we freak out about them all the time.

  • After her husband dies in a freak accident, Regal moves to Tel Aviv.

  • But to others it was only a freak of the lad's imagination, which had been much influenced by the reading of romances.

  • Another contributory source to this oddest freak of my life was the terms on which I had returned to the college.

  • A child born with three legs is a freak of nature, a monstrosity, yet it sometimes appears.

  • The Druggists Circular is to be congratulated on exposing this latest pharmaceutical freak.

  • By some freak of nature here was a place where the breed ran to high blood.