Synonym: alarm, awe, dread, fear, fright, phobia, scare, terror. Similar words: Hispanic, Spanish, companion, organic, mechanic, mechanical, pan, pant. Meaning: ['pænɪk] n. 1. an overwhelming feeling of fear and anxiety 2. sudden mass fear and anxiety over anticipated events. v. 1. be overcome by a sudden fear 2. cause sudden fear in or fill with sudden panic.
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211. Not like shooting Sweet in a moment of blind panic.
212. In panic she stumbled backwards, twisted round and tried to run into the living room.
213. I let it get up to seventy, and then broke the chain in my panic.
214. Someone shouted 'Fire!' and in the ensuing panic several people were injured.
215. These sensations are the first acute symptoms of anxiety, often leading to hyperventilation and to the initiation of catastrophic panic thoughts.
216. Often, in panic, the accused will admit to the lesser charge without a trial.
217. He floundered in panic as, for a brief moment, he could not remember why he was there.
218. I never panic when I get lost. I just change where it is I want to go. Rita Rudner
219. Most horses panic, and then they can inflict terrible damage upon themselves.
220. Certainly about ten percent of the population has suffered at least one panic attack.
221. As for Christmas Day itself, don't panic if you're cooking a big turkey lunch for the very first time.
222. Then defenceless, all we could do was fight the panic and slowly slip away.
223. Forty minutes later he was still empty-handed and beginning to panic.
224. In that moment of almost blind panic, she doubted it. Sentencedict.com
225. That relaxed, even jokey, presence we offer you is at times a front for blind panic.
226. Now that she was forced to accept that she hadn't, Celia began to panic.
227. For a minute everything went dead quiet and Henry began to panic.
228. She rang the doorbell, listened to the silence within and felt a moment of panic.
229. When 1 visited Bandley 3 in November 1983, the atmosphere was a mix of euphoria and panic.
230. She put it in to gear and eased out of the space, willing herself not to rush, not to panic.
231. The important thing is not to panic or become impatient because that way you could damage the document.
232. The professionals involved were only too aware that in recalling women for further testing they were likely to cause a panic.
233. Wild speculation, low margin requirements and sheer panic triggered the free fall that set off the Great Depression.
234. Thursday inside the Olympic Dome, Rudy not have hit the panic button, but his voice clearly was raised.
235. Presently, there was a lightening of foliage and I thought, almost disappointedly, all that panic for nothing.
236. Once you understand the panic attack problem, these particular fears of public places make perfect sense.
237. It is therefore unsurprising that such seizures are sometimes confused with panic attacks.
238. She moved through the crowd, dodging elbows, murmuring apologies, aware of a growing panic inside.
239. Sheer panic: Accused describes the barn fire that killed twin sisters.
240. In addition a 25 second burst of delta activity was seen that did not cause panic or disturbed behaviour.
More similar words: Hispanic, Spanish, companion, organic, mechanic, mechanical, pan, pant, expand, company, panel, accompany, vanish, nice, expansion, organism, organize, clinic, ethnic, mechanism, organized, keep an eye on, participant, meaningful, manipulate, chronic, laconic, clinical, keep company with, organization.