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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a mild panic" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a situation where someone feels a slight or moderate level of anxiety or distress.
Example: "As the deadline approached, I felt a mild panic creeping in, but I managed to stay focused on my work."
Alternatives: "a slight panic" or "a minor panic".
Exact(39)
Sunday in a mild panic.
A mild panic began to set in.
"I had a mild panic attack.
"No, no!" Michielsen said in a mild panic.
"They were that big," Payne says laconically, before admitting that she suffered a mild panic attack.
I am already in a mild panic when the doorbell rings at 6 o'clock.
Similar(21)
In the keep-like cellar restaurant of a Dublin hotel, mild panic sets in as a fleeting mention of the Film That Cannot Be Discussed escapes his lips, the one that is set in a galaxy far, far away.
M. Ponder Harrison, managing director for marketing at the low-fare carrier Allegiant Air, based in Las Vegas, said: "What you're seeing in Las Vegas and other leisure markets like Orlando is a kind of mild panic setting in, because all of a sudden airline seats are evaporating".
A moment of mild panic from Saints in the area was followed a few moments later by a free-kick.
If your 401(k) has turned into a 201(k) and retirement is not that far off, you may be in a state of mild panic, you and several million other Americans who were deluded by a 17-year bull market into thinking that saving for retirement would be easy and painless.
A look of mild panic froze his face, but he gamely plunged in.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com