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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a fright that" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a situation or event that causes fear or anxiety.
Example: "The sudden noise in the dark was a fright that left her heart racing."
Alternatives: "a scare that" or "a shock that".
Exact(5)
The snake pit of the title referred to the medieval practice of lowering the mentally ill into snake pits in the belief that a fright that would unhinge a sane person would cure an insane one.
Cats are not fond of walking over plastic because of its smell and feel.[16] You could also try placing blown-up balloons hidden underneath a sheet covering the furniture which will burst when clawed, causing the cat a fright that will be retained in relation to that piece of furniture long after the balloon has popped.[17].[17]
The bosses had such a fright that now they're happy!
I screamed from getting such a fright that the person was alive.
"When I saw her I got such a fright that I fell upon the floor," she said.
Similar(55)
Punching, kicking, elbowing, jerking their hunched bodies around the stage, the ensemble perform a semaphore of fright that resembles a syncopated Billy Blanks Tae Bo cardio workout.
She cites the Pintupi of Australia, who have words for 15 kinds of fear, including "nginyiwarrarringu", a spasm of fright that causes someone to jump up and look about them.
The fright that accompanies a dog bite or a radiation burn, for example, may be said to result from an injury because it arises without any intervening cause, such as a medical examination.
The panic and hysteria that gripped the city's leadership in a moment of crisis has now spread outward, a sizable stain of unreason and fright that will take years to erase.
"We've given them a real fright, that first 45 minutes that's how we play week in, week out".
Witch Hunts A sorry intersection between neuroscience, witches, and witch hunts, derives from ignorance about mental illness, and the fright that is evoked by seeing a person possessed by an overpowering hallucination or convulsion.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com