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The phrase "alarming image" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a visual representation that causes concern or fear, often in contexts related to news, art, or personal experiences.
Example: "The report included an alarming image of the environmental damage caused by the oil spill."
Alternatives: "disturbing picture" or "frightening visual".
Exact(2)
"A sea of fire in Seoul was really an alarming image when it was first mentioned," the senior government official said.
Visionary is also the word for Jeff Davis's drawing of a pile of placidly smiling male heads bathed in celestial light and Jules de Balincourt's "Men's Safety Center," with its somewhat alarming image of what looks like an internment camp with a rainbow-beamed searchlight.
Similar(58)
Political advertisements featuring such alarming images have begun to air in many states.
Their arrival was tweeted in real time by Focus E15, in a jumble of alarming images.
Many of the most alarming images belong to the Black Paintings, which covered the walls of Goya's farmhouse outside Madrid.
Several alarming images of children in the show — notably, a stupefying hand-colored photograph by Lewis Carroll of a young girl posed as a Titian Venus — point to a dark side of Victorian fantasy.
The ad features a procession of alarming images — the San Bernardino shooters, a crowd at passport control, the flag of Syria's Al Nusra Front — designed to communicate the idea of a country under siege.
And I use alarming images and bold examples to seduce audiences.
Atomwaffen is known for its graphic propaganda featuring everything from videos of members clad in skull masks firing assault rifles to alarming images produced by Dark Foreigner.
There were a number of technical glitches due to a poor internet connection, leading to an alarming, frozen image of an open-mouthed David Willetts.
Facebook promises that this will result in a "great, living, social phone", which gives me alarming mental images of something alive wriggling around in my pocket, connected directly to Mark Zuckerberg's brain.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com