AFRAID vs UNNERVED: ADJECTIVE
- Filled with fear or apprehension
- Regretful, sorry
- Filled with regret or concern. Used especially to soften an unpleasant statement.
- Filled with fear; frightened.
- Feeling worry or concern or insecurity
- Filled with regret or concern; used often to soften an unpleasant statement
- Having feelings of aversion or unwillingness
- Deprived of courage and strength
AFRAID vs UNNERVED: VERB
- N/A
- Simple past tense and past participle of unnerve.
AFRAID vs UNNERVED: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Filled with regret or concern
- Synonyms Afraid, Frightened, Terrified, timid, shy, apprehensive, troubled, suspicious, distrustful. Afraid expresses a less degree of fear than frightened or terrified, which describe outward states. In colloquial language, I am afraid is often nearly equivalent to I suspect, I am inclined to think, or the like, and is regularly used as a kind of polite introduction to a correction, objection, etc., or to make a statement sound less positive: as, I am afraid you are wrong; I am afraid that argument won't hold.
- Impressed with fear or apprehension; fearful: followed by of before the object of fear, where that is not an infinitive: as, to be afraid of death; I am afraid to go.
- N/A
AFRAID vs UNNERVED: RELATED WORDS
- Horrified, Appalled, Shocked, Panicked, Disinclined, Cowed, Alarmed, Concerned, Apprehensive, Intimidated, Petrified, Terrified, Frightened, Fearful, Scared
- Frightened, Unfazed, Irked, Disconcerted, Shocked, Perplexed, Jolted, Angered, Stunned, Startled, Shaken, Alarmed, Rattled, Spooked, Afraid
AFRAID vs UNNERVED: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Horrified, Appalled, Shocked, Panicked, Disinclined, Cowed, Alarmed, Concerned, Apprehensive, Intimidated, Petrified, Terrified, Frightened, Fearful, Scared
- Frightened, Unfazed, Irked, Disconcerted, Shocked, Perplexed, Jolted, Angered, Stunned, Startled, Shaken, Alarmed, Rattled, Spooked, Afraid
AFRAID vs UNNERVED: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- It might have been when you were afraid of commitment, or even when you were afraid of being vulnerable.
- He describes being Queer and growing up afraid of being outed, afraid of being close to other Queer teens.
- The ghost or the zombie never frightened us who were not afraid, but they will run after them who were too afraid.
- Milla is afraid of her: has always been afraid of her.
- Be not afraid of growing slowly; be afraid only of standing still.
- Once again she admitted to herself that she was afraid, horribly afraid, of the beautiful woman with the cruel eyes.
- Communism is everywhere and when you try to see it, you might start to get afraid, very afraid.
- Be afraid, America, be very afraid not so much of ISIS, but of the Emory college students.
- No one who hates but is afraid of love, and therefore must he be afraid of God.
- So the Nome was afraid of himself and afraid of everything around him.
- Rather than become unnerved, however, Reagan found the loss reinvigorating.
- However, I was overwhelmed and unnerved by the huge city.
- Manti was very unnerved by that, as you might imagine.
- Unnerved, the troops opened fire and five civilians died.
- The police are unnerved by this and leave reluctantly.
- Which surprised and unnerved him more than a little.
- Lynch, visibly unnerved, went straight to the point.
- But it was the silence that unnerved Rico.
- My husband was pretty unnerved by the conversation.
- But this whole train situation has unnerved me.
AFRAID vs UNNERVED: QUESTIONS
- Why are some people afraid of performance appraisals?
- Why are developers so afraid of annotation processors?
- Are your employees afraid of asking safety questions?
- Are You Afraid of people with facial disfigurements?
- Why are animals naturally afraid of their predators?
- Is my girlfriend afraid of commitment and intimacy?
- Are managers afraid of communicating with team members?
- Are banks afraid of Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies?
- Are naked and afraid contestants provided with sunscreen?
- Are Taiwanese transgenders afraid of public bathrooms?
- Why was Macbeth unnerved by the witches prediction?