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Discover LudwigThe phrase "getting freaked" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a state of becoming frightened or anxious, often in response to a surprising or unsettling situation. Example: "When I heard the loud noise outside, I started getting freaked out and couldn't sleep."
Exact(16)
And now we're getting freaked out about ISIS.
"I was getting freaked out" by the escalating demands, he told me.
After these mass shootings, gun sales do go up, because people start getting freaked out.
'Someone has given us your contact information because of the possibility that you've been infected.' And I'm getting freaked out.
"I'd love to see more singing sessions in pubs – ideally unaccompanied – without the pub getting freaked out," Boden says.
"I loved getting freaked out, and as a writer I figured that would be where I'd end up".
Similar(44)
"We got freaked out," Ali said.
So I'd get freaked out about my body.
I still get freaked out just being in houses".
"I get freaked out doing interviews," she admits.
They're custom-made and I get freaked out that they might get lost.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com