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192 Sentences With "frightens"

How to use frightens in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "frightens" and check conjugation/comparative form for "frightens". Mastering all the usages of "frightens" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Can it be that youth activism so frightens our authorities?
She travels the breadth of extremities, and that frightens most.
Its exports include military goods, a situation that frightens everyone.
What frightens me is knowing this can't go on forever.
Unfortunately, ego frightens many team members to shift into conflict avoidance.
The unknown frightens me more than Elizabeth Warren or [ Joe ] Biden .
The economy has suffered, too, as the violence frightens away tourists.
It's the natural world that frightens you but also attracts you.
The truth is, the odds don't factor into what frightens us.
More than anything else, the numbness that Trump creates frightens me.
That frightens people who fear they will be on the enemies list.
When there's that big a consensus on anything, it always frightens me.
"His letter frightens me," attorney Mark Lanier said in an e-mail.
And it is this last explanation that frightens America's allies the most.
It frightens me so deeply, and I love her more than anything.
In the opening scene, Bernard (Jeffrey Wright) tells Dolores she frightens him.
At Amazon, marketing that frightens customers is taboo, no matter how clever.
I almost rang her doorbell and I think that really, really frightens people.
It frightens her that nobody would know if she fell, or even died.
The thought of an audience that big frightens the life out of me.
The pope remarked on his old age, admitting that the thought "frightens" him.
This is what frightens me so much about all these newfangled therapy apps.
The prospect of setting out again on her own frightens her, she says.
" Mr. Trump is seen alone onstage, and called "one who frightens our allies.
In broadly democratic countries, violence frightens the "masses" as they really are—i.e.
Marker agrees that confronting the thing that frightens you is a helpful tactic.
If it's unwanted and it's a pattern, and it frightens you, that's stalking.
This is why deflation frightens economists so much: It's a huge drag on production.
But in their internal hierarchy of horrors, the Kim regime's collapse frightens them more.
Suddenly, he grabs her and whispers something in her ear that truly frightens her.
The biggest of those challenges, she said, is cyber security, which frightens even her.
COMPAGNO: I think what frightens me is it seems like there&aposs no investment.
The prospect of a fourth frightens Bolivians who think democracy demands alternation of power.
This might lead to a coalition with Podemos, a thought that frightens many investors.
This frightens a great many voters who seek reassurance in whatever form is available.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads CHICAGO — What so frightens us about a void?
In fact, that entire governing philosophy of pushing the envelope frightens me a little.
But it is the expected storm surge that most frightens officials across the state.
What frightens me is what happens when a transcendental technology is expected as the norm.
Trump should ask the voter what about climate change frightens him or her the most.
What if there's a terrorist attack that frightens people into choosing an extremist like Trump?
Is it the thought of getting on a train full of strangers that frightens you?
" No, replies her radical and more farseeing friend, "equality is an ugly word, and frightens.
The narrative around my feelings that frightens me the most is the idea of permanence.
Luddy breaks it down: Scott is lost without her, and her pursuing other opportunities frightens him.
But if there is one big country that frightens Poles more than Germany, it is Russia.
It can mean daring to look at what frightens others or finding the beauty in ugliness.
Step 3: Buy physical security tokensIf relying on a password manager still frightens you, you're in luck.
I hear from Giacomo firsthand about how his family and country is struggling, and it frightens me.
It's also the question that arises when eco-horror frightens us in ways we can't leave behind.
So what is it about the word "communism" that frightens Americans so much from left to right?
That is why what is occurring in America today keeps me up at night and frightens me.
That type of deal frightens tech companies, from tech giants to little startups, since it can jeopardize innovation.
Looking back, it frightens me that it took me so little time to become completely obsessed with it.
The only thing that frightens me is that she's going to have this baby before I get there.
"You don't want to seem to be contemptuous of something that really frightens the American people," Mueller says.
The word ​"Holocaust" frightens me because survivors of the Nazi death camps have told me of their suffering.
The word "Holocaust" frightens me because survivors of the Nazi death camps have told me of their suffering.
"This president cannot govern if, whenever the hard right frightens him and says: 'Jump,' he says: "How high?
What's left fits into a single bag, but when she lifts this onto her shoulder it frightens her.
" "This president cannot govern if, whenever the hard right frightens him and says 'jump,' he says 'how high?
Perhaps it's the suddenness of the personality change that frightens people, or perhaps it raises scary questions about identity.
His growing fan base—indiscriminate of manners, consideration, or any kind of social awareness of course—frightens Lawrence's character.
Bernard is not physically intimidated by Dolores; he specifies that it's her mind and its evolution that frightens him.
It is simply something that occurs when you focus on management for a long time—and it frightens me.
It frightens away potential supporters, alienates the public and allows opponents to claim that "both sides" are at fault.
On top of the U.S. trade embargo, which frightens banks from offering Cuba loans, Cuba's payment capacity is questionable.
It's Biden, the former vice president and his allies argue, who most frightens Trump as a general election opponent.
"The fact is that the path chosen by the opposition frightens Ivanishvili," he told reporters before going to prison.
If nothing else, this creates the kind of uncertainty and conflict that frightens businesses and chills investment and innovation.
Far more than such legislative slights, what frightens ordinary Muslims is the government's silence in the face of starker assaults.
Trump is a wildcard, which frightens young male and female voters—since both sexes now serve in the armed forces.
Sandra Torres, a former first lady who is leading in the polls, frightens the elite less than does Ms Aldana.
At the same time, the class-based approach raises the specter of collective guilt, which understandably frightens Russian opposition activists.
The monarch's story is "so modern that it still frightens people: a young woman in power," the show's creator said.
He is a game-changing player, one who genuinely frightens the opposition and regularly has a significant impact on the result.
"What frightens me the most is there is very little liquidity in the market," Peterffy, a billionaire, told CNBC's Rick Santelli.
But what frightens me most concerning Trump isn't what he's taking from Russia in terms of money, but rather, in ideology.
As much as his neo-isolationism frightens our allies, it is Mr. Trump's anti-establishment stance that most threatens international security.
But we can still imagine a future where VR frightens the s*** out of gamers and movie-goers around the world.   
Britain frightens its natives with the specter of a fifth column, and exhorts immigrants to integrate better and adopt British values.
Jennifer tries to teach him how to touch, but the prospect of such connection frightens Hench, and we share his fear.
" In fact, Ho said, what "frightens" him is that the "one single uniting issue in America today is the demonizing of China.
Trump's rhetoric frightens many Americans across the political spectrum, so many voters will support a foreign policy alternative to the hawkish establishment.
What frightens me is it's no longer obvious that our country will lead the most important advancements of humankind in the 204st century.
Shall we remain inside our safe little bubble, hearing only that which pleases us and seeing not that which frightens or confuses us?
What really frightens her is that she is 40, childless, and may "never be penetrated again" since she's married to a gay man.
"For some days now, I have had in mind a word that seems ugly: old age, a thought that frightens," he told Cardinals.
Yet, even though a steadily growing percentage of women now survive breast cancer, the disease still frightens many women and their loved ones.
She tells Lenù that the difference between them is that Lenù is good at making people like her while she (Lila) frightens them.
Surely all gay people fall into the same category as I. I know I am getting closer to death and this frightens me.
Mr. Erdogan's power is derived as much from what he promises and provides to his supporters as from how he frightens his critics.
We asked our fellow R29ers to anonymously spill the details on what frightens them — rational or not — when it comes to their living spaces.
All this, naturally, frightens both local and foreign investors and threatens to undermine the Philippines' newly acquired status as South-East Asia's economic star.
Reading how students, my age (17) and younger, are struggling in school because of their financial background and not having Internet access frightens me.
An attack in the U.S. frightens the public, and elected officials and others seize on that fear and fan it with stereotypes and bigotry.
"It frightens me, and not only because you might get mugged, but also because of the people who use it," she told VICE News.
Russia`s land grab frightens people and former Soviet republics like Latvia, where there are still bitter memories after a half century of Soviet occupation.
Ms Barker zooms out to relay the isolating quality of mourning: Nobody looks him in the face now, it's as if his grief frightens them.
What frightens me is it's no longer obvious that our country will be the most important driver of advancements of humankind in the 21st century.
That's the crux of Get Out's plot, presenting a movie that frightens us in a new way by bringing the conversation back to the viewer.
The Abbey, for its part, spreads stories of the Outsider hiding in the dark, and frightens people into following them, and in turn, the crown.
We don't make it harder for all landowners to sue for trespass simply because one curmudgeon frightens children who walk too closely to his lawn.
Then one evening a fierce wind storm blows through Arendelle, which frightens everyone and makes the trolls fear that the kingdom could be in danger.
My mom has sacrificed so much for me, and I love her completely, but for a while I've noticed something that frightens me a little.
And while the process might seem strange or unnatural to the leaders of Gilead, it also confuses and frightens the president, a (tragically) non-fictional man.
Once a celebrity playboy, Khan now embraces conservative Islamic stands and keeps company with radical clerics who often espouse a philosophy that frightens Pakistan&aposs minorities.
The one thing which truly frightens the management of big tech companies, more than regulators, more than competitors, more than climate change, is their own employees.
Or maybe it's like the old Phil Hartman skit "Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer": a put-upon protagonist whose world frightens and confuses him JOHN: Good morning, Mike.
"What frightens me so much is that every day in my postbox I find fliers saying things like gay people are targeting orphaned children," he said.
And the notion the Fed is going to throw ice cubes in the punch bowl just when his base is arriving to the party understandably frightens him.
But it could open the floodgates for more services in more types of hospital outpatient settings to be paid at lower rates, and that's what frightens hospitals.
And here's what really frightens me: This dynamic is likely to intensify as climate change creates new stresses that could pit nations and groups against one another.
And here's what really frightens me: This dynamic is likely to intensify as climate change creates new stresses that could pit nations and groups against one another.
Read more>>> By Jane E. Brody A steadily growing percentage of women now survive breast cancer, but the disease still frightens many women and their loved ones.
Being apart the next 90 days of our lives will be dull and painful, but it's the feeling of uncertainty and insecurity that frightens me the most.
It frightens me to think that they might face a lot of disappointment — like with Nick if he doesn't win — but the journey is what it's all about.
" "A bully is a bigger or stronger person that hurts or frightens a smaller or weaker person on purpose," it answered in rainbow letters, "over and over again.
It is a feeling I am soon going to share with my children, as it frightens me that they have more contact with their iPad than with themselves.
But I would love to see Niantic take some pages from the books of J.K. Rowling and give us a narrative that frightens us and makes us talk.
Most of the ski racing world was on hiatus, but not Shiffrin, who was taking the first step in a daring quest so outlandish it sometimes frightens her.
He has deeper and broader support than any Indian figure has generated in decades, which has enabled him to pursue an agenda that alienates minorities and frightens progressives.
And, if someone taking away your fundamental human rights is what really frightens you these days, Hulu's adaption of The Handmaid's Tale is more horrific than any horror movie.
There's a strong sense of erotic compulsion to her abilities, which activate when she starts falling for a fellow student, a young woman who both encourages and frightens her.
I think they're ill-equipped to make the choices that they are faced with, and it frightens me that they are so ill-equipped and so not well-read.
" Ben Platt stars as a wealthy high-schooler so focused on winning his student body's presidential election that his own mother (Gwyneth Paltrow) comments that his "ambition frightens [her].
Cookbooks Novice bakers might be hesitant about folding egg whites and proofing yeast, but nothing frightens their floury souls more than the prospect of making pie dough from scratch.
The necessary use of the head below the opponent's to free the arms also frightens many referees, who are terrified of the fighters' heads coming together at any point.
The idea behind this mode of therapy is that, by facing the thing that frightens you, you'll see that it's much more benign than what your imagination had concocted.
What frightens elites of all ideological stripes about Donald Trump, more than any particular policy position he's adopted or flirted with, is his brazen contempt for checks on political power.
Similarly, when Trump wages trade wars against America's neighbors in Canada and Mexico, and America's democratic allies in Europe, he frightens and alarms voters in states and sectors that export.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is so entrenched in its desire to eliminate native wildlife that frightens ranchers that they have their own "rogue agency" dedicated to killing such wildlife.
"It's an aircraft that frightens airline CFOs; the risk of failing to sell so many seats is just too high," said a senior aerospace industry source familiar with the program.
Mr Trump enjoys 89% approval ratings among Republicans, despite a string of unfulfilled campaign promises, because he is a fighter who makes liberals mad, appals hoity-toity intellectuals and frightens foreigners.
"They're trying to shut down Planned Parenthoods and make abortion illegal, and that really frightens and saddens me, because it's such an amazing thing that is provided to women," Belastri said.
So while Red frightens away the Big Bad Wolf with her rifle in the NRA version, in real life, Red herself would have been far more at risk than the wolf.
In full view of a retinue of engineers, he crushes a model of Leonardo's design, which "frightens" him with its innovation but ignores the human reality that Michelangelo aspires to distill.
"What frightens me is that pregnant women rushing to us in desperation want to have their pregnancies terminated," said Hungarian geneticist Imre Feiffer in June 1986, according to the LA Times.
It is not death in general or even death from covid-2000 that frightens me as much as the fact that it is changing our death experience to one of isolation.
The idea of how hard the renos will hit my bank account frightens me, even though I know in the end that we're going to love it and it's a great investment.
But the thing that frightens me about what I just said is that I don't think most people notice when those details are missing in movies, especially when it's women of color.
"The armed forces are delivering their best services and no threat frightens Iran," Iran's Armed Forces Chief of Staff, Major General Mohammad Bagheri was quoted as saying by the state news agency IRNA.
I am not self-satisfied but I feel that God has made my life empty in this respect so that I may fill it in some wonderful way—the word 'wonderful' frightens me.
The first is that the corporate defaults are actually decreasing, and the risk that frightens so many people is mostly confined the companies with the very lowest credit ratings of CCC or lower.
I know my appearance frightens some of the boys—the high cheeks and freckles and not-quite-Negro eyes flaring gray as storm-washed skies back home; it shames them to be reminded.
"They too are in the dark about what is going on in their country due to the internet shutdown, and it frightens me that our ability to communicate is so limited," she says.
Mr. Trump frightens Europeans not because of his willingness to build walls (Europe is ahead of him on this front), and not because Europeans are besotted with globalization (many of them hate it).
In the same vein, newly introduced Daredevil villain Bullseye (Wilson Bethel) is a troubled young man whose violence is motivated by one woman who dies of cancer, and another whom he stalks and frightens.
The fear and suspicion directed at China in the early days of the outbreak have made a 180-degree turn: It is now the West that frightens Asia and the rest of the world.
"It frightens me, because we don't know what effect vaping has," said Dr. Fimple, an education administrator in state government, as she sat with her daughter, Dulcia Steffen, in her living room this month.
In an exclusive sneak peek at the season 2 premiere of the TLC ghost-hunting show, it isn't a lingering spirit that frightens friends Dalen Spratt, Juwan Mass and Marcus Harvey — it's a cat named Oogly.
Mr. Putin's Russia, by contrast, frightens Americans because they know that the United States and Russia should be very different, but many of the pathologies present in Russia can also be found in the United States.
But the hundreds of people now living in shelters, from tents inside warehouses to more established settings, are in legal limbo - a situation some say frightens them because they feel vulnerable to kidnappings, violence and serious illness.
We are a country in the grip of fear; the newly elected president has encouraged it; the world's chaos frightens everyone, and as in the World War II era, we wonder who will keep our families safe.
They rarely go out in public because it frightens them and could put them in danger, said Ester Rwela, a social worker with the charity Under the Same Sun who came with them to the United States.
One doctor told Scientific American that "misinformation on the internet often frightens parents away from following" the vaccination schedule recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the only one endorsed by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
With ... Jason Blum WASHINGTON, D.C. — I wanted to meet Jason Blum, the king of low-budget horror movies, at the scariest place on earth so that we could talk about Halloween, our favorite holiday, and what frightens us.
We are confused as to what is to be done to us in this case...the earth is still moving - it really frightens us, so we don't know whatever to do, all the services in Mendi have closed.
Ms. Simpson does some charming clowning, and Mr. Ortiz frightens away a magnificent beast — a huge puppet that is part tiger, part bear and deserves more than a cameo — like a hiker encountering a black bear on the trail.
Mulvaney, who also serves as the White House budget chief and sought to eliminate the CFPB as a GOP congressman, said Cordray's mentality "frightens me a little" and insisted he'd reorient the bureau toward enforcing and not creating laws.
One of the most contentious issues with the new law is that it creates criminal penalties for those who make false statements in their sworn affidavits, a move that critics of the law believe confuses and frightens potential voters.
Mulvaney, who also serves as the White House budget chief and sought to eliminate the CFPB as a GOP congressman, said Cordray's mentality "frightens me a little" and insisted he'd reorient the bureau toward enforcing and not creating laws.
"He continued: "It flies in the face of everything we believe in at Momofuku, it frightens many of the people who work for you, and it contradicts what I hoped to accomplish by taking your money in the first place.
"That's not the conversation that's going on in the coffee shops and on the street corners here," said Mr. Hannon, who identified himself as a Republican but said he planned to vote for the Libertarian candidate because Mr. Trump "frightens" him.
"It flies in the face of everything we believe in at Momofuku, it frightens many of the people who work for you, and it contradicts what I hoped to accomplish by taking your money in the first place," Chang said.
"The extremists have shown what frightens them most — a girl with a book," tweeted Malala Yousafzai, the Nobel laureate and education advocate who as a young student was gravely wounded by Taliban gunmen six years ago in Swat, a nearby valley.
To not feel whatever it was that I was afraid of... Control is, what's underneath the desire to control it, it's a desire to stave off something that frightens you or something you feel powerless over and those feelings are just so uncomfortable.
And then he escapes it all, by learning not to care — not about how or whether other people see him, not about whether he hurts or frightens or kills them, not about whether his final-act manifesto makes any sort of coherent sense.
"Although 'Victoria' has a romantic sensibility, at its heart it is about a concept so modern that it still frightens people: a young woman in power," who had direction over her life that one doesn't expect in a period drama, Ms. Goodwin said.
To avoid any risk of infringing a ban on dollar payments to or from Iran passing through U.S. financial institutions - one that still frightens European banks, some of which received heavy U.S. penalties for doing business in Iran - all transactions are done in euros.
The opening track, "How Simple," is both a love song and a break-up song, as Quinlan, for once, embraces herself and her capacity for love—"How simple my heart can be / Frightens me"—while navigating her way out of a messy romantic relationship.
Words instead of fists Vazquez's imprisonment will be a long one, and it will soon take a more serious turn -- "it frightens me because it's a new experience," he says -- as he prepares for transfer to the men's Ironwood State Prison in Blythe, California.
Asked what difference it all made, Mr. Brock pointed to the small comforts he could take in what was a devastating and unexpected loss: Mr. Trump's historically low approval ratings, the high share of voters who say a Trump presidency frightens them, and Mrs.
"If there's something that frightens me about Holocaust remembrance it's the recognition of the revolting processes that occurred in Europe in general, and particularly in Germany, back then – 70, 80 and 90 years ago – and finding signs of them here among us today in 2016," he said.
"If there's something that frightens me about Holocaust remembrance it's the recognition of the nauseating processes that occurred in Europe in general, and particularly in Germany, back then – 70, 80 and 90 years ago – and finding signs of them here among us today in 2016," he said.
The smart home space seems perpetually stuck in this Game of Thrones-style internecine conflict between great smart Houses that demand insane amounts of loyalty (House Apple and House Samsung are just as walled-off), all of which confuses and maybe even frightens the regular citizenry.
Her grandfather Will frightens her by yelling at the TV set whenever footage of the camps comes on; once, when she used a ballpoint pen to ink a copy of his tattoo on her arm, thinking it would please him, he screamed at her in Yiddish.
In recent years, investment bank executives had differentiated between two types of volatility: One that leads to less trading because it frightens and confuses investors, and another that generates a higher level of trading because investors see changes in yields and prices they have to adapt to.
Pain and manliness validate each other in action stories, creating wish-fulfillment scenarios where the audience can imagine being just as calm under fire as their heroes, just as impervious to any physical or emotional pain they feel, just as capable of shrugging off whatever hurts or frightens them.
"This is not allowable in a democracy and frankly it frightens me that republicans are standing up and defending the president because if he gets away with this, what's to stop him from essentially integrating the entirety of American foreign policy into his political re-election campaign," he added.
In the story told by "Punk Lust," much of it laid out in placards by the writer and musician Vivien Goldman, one of the show's curators, graphic sexual imagery is a tool for shock that frightens away the straight world and offers comfort to those who remain inside.
The Manifesto is deeply problematic but also hilarious, the inverse of Futurism and so relevant to our current moment: The female's individuality, which he is acutely aware of, but which he doesn't comprehend and isn't capable of relating to or grasping emotionally, frightens and upsets him and fills him with envy.
Michelle de Kretser's slender novella SPRINGTIME (Catapult, paper, $11.95) carries the subtitle "A Ghost Story," but it's the wispiest spook story imaginable: a domestic tale in which the ghost seems almost an afterthought, an apparition that frightens only mildly and that haunts only as a metaphor for other varieties of loss.
"Nótt eftir nótt (translation: night after night) contains songs of regrets, shadows, witches and all the things that lure in the darkest hour of night, mixed with Icelandic folklore and reminiscence of the winter darkness that simultaneously frightens us and makes us feel at home," says the band's keyboardist, Solveig Matthildur.
Former President George W. Bush's chief of staff says that the prospect of a Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE presidency frightens him.
"He personally addressed Ross, whom he said sometimes listened to the podcast, saying the fundraiser "flies in the face of everything we believe in at Momofuku, it frightens many of the people who work for you, and it contradicts what I hoped to accomplish by taking your money in the first place.
Euroskeptical leaders on the Continent may be quick to claim that history has changed course, but recent opinion polls and the outcome of Spain's parliamentary elections suggest that Brexit frightens rather than inspires, and it is the pro-European mainstream rather than the anti-Europe extreme that may benefit from the current maelstrom.
It's an invention of a problem, not a natural consequence or inevitable path, and it's the kind of plot point that frightens me — partly thanks to one character's always creepy doll obsession but mostly because it's the kind of move a show makes when it doesn't know what to do with itself.
The common denominator of Trump, Johnson and Netanyahu is that they all campaign by moving further and further to the right, seeking to aggressively mobilize their core political base which increasingly angers, frightens, alarms and mobilizes the large majority of voters who reject and abhor the political extremism and bitter divisions the far right promotes.
Mr. Goldwasser picked up perhaps the oldest item in the archive, a notebook from around 1947 for a theater class at the New School's Dramatic Workshop (where his classmates included Marlon Brando, Elaine Stritch and Tony Curtis) and started reading: "Sometimes I feel lonely, so lonely it frightens me …" Mr. Belafonte's musical career started not long after, in similar storybook fashion.
I live in Los Angeles now, just a few miles from the often-mocked Los Angeles River, and I've learned to hunt its monster carp the same way I learned my favorite trout streams: by losing myself, exploring its cement-walled canyon, seeing what frightens fish and what makes them feel comfortable, observing what's around that they might like to eat.
On policy, Mr. Kemp, 54, Georgia's secretary of state, recently made a small but important tweak to his longstanding promise to sign a state version of a federal religious freedom law, a possibility that frightens many in the Atlanta business community who fear that it could prompt harmful boycotts and backlash from liberals who believe such a law would be used to discriminate against the lesbian, gay bisexual and transgender community.

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