WORRY vs BROOD: NOUN
- The act of worrying or the condition of being worried; persistent mental uneasiness.
- A source of nagging concern or uneasiness.
- A state of undue solicitude; a state of disturbance from care and anxiety; vexation; anxiety; fret.
- Harassing anxiety, solicitude, or turmoil; perplexity arising from over-anxiety or petty annoyances and cares; trouble: as, it is not work but worry that kills; the worries of housekeeping.
- The act of worrying or biting and mangling with the teeth; the act of killing by biting and shaking.
- An instance or cause of such a feeling.
- Something or someone that causes anxiety; a source of unhappiness
- A strong feeling of anxiety
- A north of Scotland name for salmon-fry.
- To ponder.
- Heavy waste in tin and copper ores.
- The young birds hatched at one time; a hatch.
- That which is bred or produced; breed; species.
- Synonyms Covey, etc. See flock.
- In mining, any heterogeneous mixture with tin or copper ore, as mundic or black-jack.
- That which is bred; species generated; that which is produced; hence, figuratively, sort or kind.
- A hatch; the young birds hatched in one nest, or those placed together in the care of one hen, or in an artificial brooder: as, a brood of chickens or of ducks.
- Offspring; progeny.
- The young of an animal cared for at one time
- Oyster spat in the second year of development.
- The young of any egg-laying creature, especially if produced at the same time.
- The eggs and larvae of social insects such as bees, ants and some wasps, especially when gathered together in special brood chambers or combs within the colony.
- The young of certain animals, especially a group of young birds hatched at one time and cared for together.
- The children in one family.
- The young from the same dam, whether produced at the same time or not; young children of the same mother, especially if nearly of the same age; offspring; progeny.
WORRY vs BROOD: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Kept for breeding from; ; having young.
- Sitting or inclined to sit on eggs.
- Kept for breeding.
WORRY vs BROOD: VERB
- Be on the mind of
- Be worried, concerned, anxious, troubled, or uneasy
- Be concerned with
- Disturb the peace of mind of; afflict with mental agitation or distress
- Touch or rub constantly
- To seize or shake by the throat, especially of a dog or wolf.
- To harass; to irritate or distress.
- To be troubled, to give way to mental anxiety.
- To strangle.
- Lacerate by biting
- Hang over, as of something threatening, dark, or menacing
- Sit on (eggs)
- Think moodily or anxiously about something
- Be in a huff; be silent or sullen
- Be in a huff and display one's displeasure
- To keep an egg warm to make it hatch.
- To protect.
- To dwell upon moodily and at length.
WORRY vs BROOD: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To feel uneasy or concerned about something; be troubled. : brood.
- To seize something with the teeth and bite or tear repeatedly.
- To touch or handle something nervously or persistently.
- To attempt to deal with something in a persistent or dogged manner.
- To cause to feel anxious, distressed, or troubled. : trouble.
- To feel or express undue care and anxiety; to manifest disquietude or pain; to be fretful; to chafe
- To chase and nip at or attack.
- To attempt to deal with in a persistent or repeated manner.
- To bother or annoy, as with petty complaints.
- To attack roughly and repeatedly; harass.
- To seize with the teeth and bite or tug at repeatedly.
- To touch or handle nervously or persistently.
- To focus the attention on a subject persistently and moodily; worry.
- To sit on or hatch eggs.
- To be depressed.
- To protect developing eggs or young.
- To hover envelopingly; hang.
- To think about (something) persistently or moodily.
- To have the mind dwell continuously or moodily on a subject; to think long and anxiously; to be in a state of gloomy, serious thought; -- usually followed by over or on.
- To sit on and cover eggs, as a fowl, for the purpose of warming them and hatching the young; or to sit over and cover young, as a hen her chickens, in order to warm and protect them; hence, to sit quietly, as if brooding.
WORRY vs BROOD: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To harass or beset with importunity, or with care an anxiety; to vex; to annoy; to torment; to tease; to fret; to trouble; to plague.
- To harass with labor; to fatigue.
- To harass by pursuit and barking; to attack repeatedly; also, to tear or mangle with the teeth.
- To think anxiously or moodily upon.
- To sit over, cover, and cherish.
WORRY vs BROOD: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Disturb the peace of mind of
- A source of unhappiness
- To be unduly anxious and careful; give way to anxiety; be over-solicitous or disquieted about things; borrow trouble; fret.
- To fight, as dogs, by seizing and biting at each other; be engaged in biting, shaking, or mangling with the teeth.
- Synonyms Pester, Plague, etc. (see tease), disturb, disquiet.
- To tease; trouble; harass with importunity or with care and anxiety; plague; bother; vex; persecute.
- To seize by the throat with the teeth; bite at or tear with the teeth, as dogs when fighting; kill or injure badly by repeated biting, tearing, shaking, etc.: as, a dog that worries sheep; a terrier worries rats.
- To choke; suffocate.
- To choke; be suffocated, as by something stopping the windpipe.
- (idiom) (not to worry) There is nothing to worry about; there is no need to be concerned.
- To incubate: as, brooded eggs.
- To cherish with care.
- To sit over, cover, and cherish: as, a hen broods her chicks; hence, to nourish.
- To meditate long and anxiously; remain a long time in anxiety or solicitous thought; have the mind dwelling persistently on a subject: with on or over.
- To rest fixedly like a brooding bird.
- To sit persistently on eggs, covering and warming them with the body and wings, for the purpose of hatching them: said of birds.
- To ponder over; plan or mature with care: as, “to brood war,”
- An obsolete form of broad.
- Be in a huff
- Be silent or sullen
WORRY vs BROOD: RELATED WORDS
- Fears, Concerned, Fear, Fret, Occupy, Distress, Brood, Interest, Mind, Vexation, Care, Dwell, Headache, Trouble, Concern
- Offspring, Bulk large, Oviparous, Loom, Hover, Cover, Worry, Dwell, Stew, Incubate, Sulk, Pout, Grizzle, Hatch, Hatching
WORRY vs BROOD: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Anxiety, Scared, Afraid, Concerned, Fear, Occupy, Distress, Brood, Interest, Mind, Care, Dwell, Headache, Trouble, Concern
- Progeny, Nest, Offspring, Oviparous, Hover, Cover, Worry, Dwell, Stew, Incubate, Sulk, Pout, Grizzle, Hatch, Hatching
WORRY vs BROOD: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Save yourself any worry of paying extra fees.
- First, I think you worry excessively over communism.
- We make buying a used car worry free.
- As you can worry if should contain only.
- You should not worry so much about that.
- Across every generation, parents worry about their kids.
- Learn why Christians do not have to worry.
- The Catholic Church does not worry whether we formally endorse its doctrines, so why should we worry whether it endorses ours?
- Too often we try to fight worry by simply telling ourselves that worry is wrong.
- Siblings in separation have the ability to worry together and worry they will.
- Honey in and around the brood nest is often much darker as the dark brood combs Shake and brush discolour the honey.
- Victoria, colonies should have eight to ten frames of adult bees and two to four frames of brood including unsealed brood.
- Completely hairless, they also have a brightly colored tattoo, a so-called brood mark, on their foreheads, which denotes what brood they were created in.
- A female raises only one brood per year and the brood consists of four, and sometimes only three, chicks.
- This device keeps the queen in the brood nest so brood will not occur in honey supers.
- When the House Control Mode is Brood, only sensors in the Brood area are used by the controller.
- Examine elms for brood brood wood must be Remove wild elms in the Monumental Core.
- This is required so that honey bee brood can be inspected for presence of brood disease.
- When used for the brood nest, it is called a brood chamber.
- The period of time between queens will mean a gap in the brood cycle and without brood, many brood diseases cannot persist.
WORRY vs BROOD: QUESTIONS
- Should commodity investors worry about negative yields?
- Should I worry about premature atrial contractions?
- Should you worry about frequent Permissions repairs?
- Which constipation symptoms should you worry about?
- Should investors worry about Chipotle (CMG) options?
- Should we worry about genetically modified vegetables?
- When does worry become uncontrollable and excessive?
- Should you worry about Lassonde Industries'dividend?
- Should financial marketers worry about gamification?
- Do not worry about tomorrow for tomorrow will worry about itself?
- What level does brood mother spawn in Spider's Den?
- Are Brood X cicadas infected with sexually transmitted fungus?
- Is brood parasitism a viable reproductive strategy in birds?
- What was Protoss society like before the Brood Wars?
- Why did brood parasitism shift from intraspecific to obligate?
- How many basset hounds have been rescued from brood?
- How many oxalic acid vaporization treatments for brood?
- How does Northside native bees monitor brood temperature?
- How does brood habitat quality affect Duckling survival?
- Wat zijn de standaardwaarden voor brood geroosterd?