horrify
English
Etymology
horror + -ify, or borrowed from Latin horrificare (cf. French horrifier). 1791, in form horrifying.[1]
Verb
horrify (third-person singular simple present horrifies, present participle horrifying, simple past and past participle horrified)
- To cause to feel extreme apprehension or unease; to cause to experience horror.
- The haunted house was horrifying, from one room to the next I felt more and more like I wasn’t going to survive.
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References
- “horrify” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary, 2001–2019.
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