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eerie
[ eer-ee ]
adjective
- uncanny, so as to inspire superstitious fear; weird
an eerie midnight howl.
- Chiefly Scot. affected with superstitious fear.
eerie
/ 藞瑟蓹谤瑟 /
adjective
- (esp of places, an atmosphere, etc) mysteriously or uncannily frightening or disturbing; weird; ghostly
Derived Forms
- 藞别别谤颈苍别蝉蝉, noun
- 藞别别谤颈濒测, adverb
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 别别路谤颈路濒测 adverb
- 别别路谤颈路苍别蝉蝉 noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of eerie1
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of eerie1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
There's an eerie silence in areas that once bustled with tourist activity.
New York 鈥 An eerie, overpowering force has taken over the Marquis Theatre, home of 鈥淪tranger Things: The First Shadow,鈥 which had its official Broadway opening on Tuesday.
In a 2003 case that has some eerie parallels to Garcia鈥檚, Wilkinson wrote an opinion that the New York Times called 鈥渁 major legal victory鈥 for the administration of President George W. Bush.
Dancers rolled by on wheeled stools like little space people to some of Marcel Dupr茅鈥檚 eerie 鈥24 Organ Inventions.鈥
In 1996 I worked at Disney Interactive, my Windows 95 operating system skinned with an 鈥淴-Files鈥 theme; when I arrived early, the TV show鈥檚 eerie chimes echoed across the empty office.
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