释义 |
Definition of eerie in English: eerieadjectiveeerier, eeriest ˈɪəriˈɪri Strange and frightening. an eerie green glow in the sky Example sentencesExamples - There was something rather eerie about people turning up unexpectedly around the door and starting to sing.
- The plot begins with a woman who witnesses a murder on a dark and eerie night.
- The sun was setting and it cast an eerie red glow upon the tan walls of my small room.
- The eerie yellowish glow on the horizon turned out to be vapor lights from a large greenhouse.
- It's the later war scenes, in which there are no scenes of war, that are weird and eerie.
- The echoes of the last gunshot had died long ago, replaced by an unnatural and eerie silence.
- They are concerned for elderly neighbours who can be left terrified by the eerie silences on the end of the phone.
- Amidst floating human and animals corpses, only the sea waves break the eerie silence.
- The sound was particularly successful in adding an eerie feel to the mysterious and compelling plot.
- Dark grayish smoke smothered the scene and the eerie green fire ate away at the hole in front of him.
- From somewhere in the emptiness behind us there comes a faint, eerie howl.
- He hated how his uncle crept up silently on him; it was both eerie and uncanny.
- An eerie young boy keeps hanging about outside her Central Park apartment.
- It's dark and eerie - a bizarre experience enhanced by the narcosis that is slowly creeping up on me.
- Over the next few days we cut holes in the sea ice and dived beneath it, which was strange but beautiful in an eerie sort of way.
- We move swiftly past riotously colonised rock faces of the cliffs into the eerie green water below the arch.
- Backstage is strangely eerie, so I go to my dressing-room for some quiet time.
- This chapter has an eerie, sombre feeling which draws their investigation to a close.
- The room was dark, except for an eerie glow of green from a weak neon lamp on the ceiling.
- Some show York street scenes so deserted that they have an eerie quality.
Synonyms uncanny, sinister, ghostly, spectral, unnatural, unearthly, preternatural, supernatural, other-worldly, unreal, mysterious, strange, abnormal, odd, curious, queer, weird, bizarre, freakish frightening, spine-chilling, hair-raising, blood-curdling, scaring, terrifying, petrifying, chilling Scottish eldritch informal creepy, scary, spooky, freaky British informal rum
Derivatives nounˈɪərɪnəsˈɪrinəs There was an aura of strangeness around the set, a sort of quiet eeriness to it all. Example sentencesExamples - But, today there was just this eeriness about the place that I could not explain and office space was being given away for $0.50 per square foot.
- A high school graduation dance displays an eeriness that makes me thankful I never have to step foot inside a classroom ever again.
- This location's far back from the main road, so it's deathly quiet, which only adds to the general eeriness.
- I'm thinking of the score Philip Glass did for Dracula and how it brought the film to a whole new level of eeriness, an emotional impact that I don't think it ever achieved before that.
Origin Middle English (originally northern English and Scots in the sense 'fearful'): probably from Old English earg 'cowardly', of Germanic origin; related to German arg. Rhymes beery, bleary, cheery, dearie, dreary, Dun Laoghaire, eyrie (US aerie), Kashmiri, leery, peri, praemunire, query, smeary, teary, theory, weary Definition of eerie in US English: eerieadjectiveˈɪriˈirē Strange and frightening. an eerie green glow in the sky Example sentencesExamples - An eerie young boy keeps hanging about outside her Central Park apartment.
- It's the later war scenes, in which there are no scenes of war, that are weird and eerie.
- The plot begins with a woman who witnesses a murder on a dark and eerie night.
- The room was dark, except for an eerie glow of green from a weak neon lamp on the ceiling.
- The echoes of the last gunshot had died long ago, replaced by an unnatural and eerie silence.
- This chapter has an eerie, sombre feeling which draws their investigation to a close.
- The sound was particularly successful in adding an eerie feel to the mysterious and compelling plot.
- He hated how his uncle crept up silently on him; it was both eerie and uncanny.
- There was something rather eerie about people turning up unexpectedly around the door and starting to sing.
- Over the next few days we cut holes in the sea ice and dived beneath it, which was strange but beautiful in an eerie sort of way.
- Dark grayish smoke smothered the scene and the eerie green fire ate away at the hole in front of him.
- It's dark and eerie - a bizarre experience enhanced by the narcosis that is slowly creeping up on me.
- Amidst floating human and animals corpses, only the sea waves break the eerie silence.
- The eerie yellowish glow on the horizon turned out to be vapor lights from a large greenhouse.
- Some show York street scenes so deserted that they have an eerie quality.
- They are concerned for elderly neighbours who can be left terrified by the eerie silences on the end of the phone.
- From somewhere in the emptiness behind us there comes a faint, eerie howl.
- The sun was setting and it cast an eerie red glow upon the tan walls of my small room.
- Backstage is strangely eerie, so I go to my dressing-room for some quiet time.
- We move swiftly past riotously colonised rock faces of the cliffs into the eerie green water below the arch.
Synonyms uncanny, sinister, ghostly, spectral, unnatural, unearthly, preternatural, supernatural, other-worldly, unreal, mysterious, strange, abnormal, odd, curious, queer, weird, bizarre, freakish
Origin Middle English (originally northern English and Scots in the sense ‘fearful’): probably from Old English earg ‘cowardly’, of Germanic origin; related to German arg. |