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Discover LudwigThe sentence "He got frightened" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you want to describe a situation in which someone becomes scared or intimidated. For example, "When the roller coaster lunged forward, he got frightened and screamed."
Exact(4)
When it stopped he got frightened and ran.
Tommy Haas Germany, aged 37, world No 848 Tommy first came to the academy when he was 11, but he got frightened and went back home.
His story goes something like this: he got frightened when he was still green (we see an encounter with an eager teen-age girl who sports scary steel braces on her teeth), and thinking about his fear made him more frightened; years later, his anxieties have snowballed so heavily that he's permanently flummoxed.
He got frightened and confused, couldn't sleep at night and was worried somebody was breaking into the house.
Similar(56)
He doesn't like sleeping by himself and Westwood tells me that he doesn't like to fly alone because "he gets frightened" and: "You mention mothering, which I don't think I do, but sometimes he pesters you like a child.
He gets frightened sometimes, he said, knowing what his brother and his coaches endured, the wasting, the incontinence, the suffering.
"We heard the noise, she got frightened.
"When her surroundings change, she gets frightened," Mrs. DiViesti said.
I ask if she gets frightened when Harvey goes off on one.
Far from Ethel coping, the reality is that when left alone, she gets frightened.
But I didn't end up loving him, because I immediately got frightened since he's everywhere.
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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