eerie

eerie
eerie c.1300, "fearful, timid," north England and Scottish variant of O.E. earg "cowardly, fearful," from P.Gmc. *argaz (Cf. O.Fris. erg "evil, bad," M.Du. arch "bad," Du. arg, O.H.G. arg "cowardly, worthless," Ger. arg "bad, wicked," O.N. argr "unmanly, voluptuous," Swed. arg "malicious"). Sense of "causing fear because of strangeness" is first attested 1792. Related: Eerily. Finnish arka "cowardly" is a Germanic loan-word.

Etymology dictionary. 2014.

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  • Eerie — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Eerie fue el título de una revista estadounidense especializada en historieta de terror, publicada por Warren Publishing desde 1966 a 1983. Contenido Constó de 145 números, en los que se publicaron por primera vez… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Eerie — Pays États Unis Langue anglais Périodicité bimensuel, puis 9 numéros/an Genre comics, horreur Prix au numéro de 0,35 USD à 2,75 USD Date de fondation début 1966 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Eerie — Ee rie, Eery Ee ry, a. [Scotch, fr. AS. earh timid.] 1. Serving to inspire fear, esp. a dread of seeing ghosts; wild; weird; as, eerie stories. [1913 Webster] She whose elfin prancer springs By night to eery warblings. Tennyson. [1913 Webster] 2 …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • eerie — index sinister Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • eerie — *weird, uncanny Analogous words: *fantastic, bizarre, grotesque: *mysterious, inscrutable, arcane: *fearful, awful, dreadful, horrific: *strange, odd, queer, curious, peculiar …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • eerie — [adj] spooky awesome, bizarre, crawly, creepy, fantastic, fearful, frightening, ghostly, mysterious, scary, spectral, strange, supernatural, superstitious, uncanny, unearthly, weird; concept 537 Ant. funny, normal, ordinary, silly …   New thesaurus

  • eerie — ► ADJECTIVE (eerier, eeriest) ▪ strange and frightening. DERIVATIVES eerily adverb eeriness noun. ORIGIN originally northern English and Scots in the sense «fearful»: probably from Old English, «cowardly» …   English terms dictionary

  • eerie — or eery [ir′ē, ē′rē] adj. eerier, eeriest [N Eng dial & Scot < ME eri, filled with dread, prob. var. of erg, cowardly, timid < OE earg, akin to Ger arg, bad, wicked: for IE base see ORCHESTRA] 1. Now Rare timid or frightened; uneasy because …   English World dictionary

  • Eerie — For other uses, see Eerie (disambiguation). Eerie Eerie #11 (1967). Cover art by Joe Orlando Publication information Publisher …   Wikipedia

  • eerie — also eery adjective (eerier; est) Etymology: Middle English (northern dialect) eri Date: 14th century 1. chiefly Scottish affected with fright ; scared 2. so mysterious, strange, or unexpected as to send a chill up the spine < a coyote s eerie… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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