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horror
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English Dictionary: Horror by the DICT Development Group
2 results for Horror
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
horror
n
  1. intense and profound fear
  2. something that inspires dislike; something horrible; "the painting that others found so beautiful was a horror to him"
  3. intense aversion
    Synonym(s): repugnance, repulsion, revulsion, horror
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Horror \Hor"ror\, n. [Formerly written horrour.] [L. horror, fr.
      horrere to bristle, to shiver, to tremble with cold or dread,
      to be dreadful or terrible; cf. Skr. h[?]sh to bristle.]
      1. A bristling up; a rising into roughness; tumultuous
            movement. [Archaic]
  
                     Such fresh horror as you see driven through the
                     wrinkled waves.                                 --Chapman.
  
      2. 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.
  
      3. A painful emotion of fear, dread, and abhorrence; a
            shuddering with terror and detestation; the feeling
            inspired by something frightful and shocking.
  
                     How could this, in the sight of heaven, without
                     horrors of conscience be uttered?      --Milton.
  
      4. That which excites horror or dread, or is horrible; gloom;
            dreariness.
  
                     Breathes a browner horror on the woods. --Pope.
  
      {The horrors}, delirium tremens. [Colloq.]
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