View example sentences and word forms for Frightens.

Frightens

Frightens | Frightening | Frightened | Frighten

Frightens meaning

third-person singular simple present indicative of frighten

Example sentences (20)

I feel like we’ve always had such a diverse group of people in a room, so, what interests you or frightens you might be different than what interests me or frightens me, but chances are we’re going to hit some of our viewers with those same fears.

However, his appearance causes a separate problem: Because Donna and Rose only remember him from earlier that night, his sudden reappearance confuses and frightens them.

There is something about Rivers State that frightens even neutrals.

You know the scariest thing is when the textbook frightens the student.

The creators behind Enola at the Scare Maze have taken haunted attractions to new extremes, creating an experience that not only frightens but deeply unsettles its participants.

Del Toro's fantasy world both captivates and frightens with its entrancing visuals and unforgettable creatures.

If there is one thing that has made HH loose elections its the inner tribalistic hatred a lot of you bear. it frightens people.

In actuality, she shelters Vector, a yellow-eyed young man whose appearance so often frightens people that Ms. Jacobs won't let him go outside, out of fear for his safety.

It frightens me to see how much Trump is like the Hitler who knew no bounds in his thirst for power before 1933.

Memorial Day, Fourth of July and Labor Day celebrations fueled surges in the United States, which is why Thanksgiving frightens public health officials.

Nothing frightens South Africans more than hearing the truth.

Yet in many of these instances, he finds it much easier to lose control and abuse the extra power by going after criminals with a brutality that frightens even him.

The Wal-mart video is tasteful, entertaining, engaging, and that’s what really frightens the AFA (and others).

We don't know how he will progress and that really frightens us.

Ari Aster’s debut feature frightens you in several ways, both in the scares that this film presents (which includes scenes reminiscent of The Exorcist) and the family drama going on, sometimes both happening at the same time.

I'm terrified of heights - actually no, I'm not, it's that frightens me - and I was expecting this to be a lot more scary.

In the opening scene, Bernard (Jeffrey Wright) tells Dolores she frightens him.

It frightens me because, like the foolhardy of Aristotle’s virtue, I fear the religious fanatic who is so convinced that she is right; who is so convinced that God is on his side that nothing will stand in the way of executing divine justice.

The fear of not being able to stop or steer frightens the hell out of me.

The vehemence in even stating the difference between an Ijebu person and his Remo blood brother baffles and even frightens these days.