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Discover LudwigThe phrase "urge to panic" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a strong feeling or impulse to become anxious or fearful in a particular situation. Example: "As the deadline approached, I felt an overwhelming urge to panic about the unfinished project."
Exact(6)
Resist the urge to panic when you're down and to celebrate when you are up.
Captain Mainwaring is still vain and pompous; Sergeant Wilson remains his diffident, quietly subversive self; Private Fraser still thinks we're doomed; Private Walker is still selling nylons; and Jones, veteran of all those scrapes with the Kaiser's army and the fuzzy wuzzies, who don't like it up 'em, you know, (it's the cold steel), is still manfully resisting the urge to panic.
Please resist the urge to panic.
But you should resist the urge to panic.
Fighting the urge to panic, I found my way clumsily onto the bus and struggled to put the seatbelt on.
As soon as you realize you're stranded, you may feel a natural urge to panic.
Similar(51)
Parents throughout the country have been urged not to panic.
Parents were urged not to panic today following the death of a 14-year-old girl who had been given a cervical cancer vaccine.
"I know everyone has been urged not to panic but I just felt safer moving the money somewhere else rather than worrying about Northern Rock's financial position over the next few days".
"In regard to the vaccine itself, we would urge parents not to panic as a result of this.
However, we don't yet know that shift work is a risk factor for breast cancer, so we'd urge women not to panic.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com