Similar words: electromagnetic spectrum, spectrum, aspect, inspect, specter, respect, suspect, prospect. Meaning: ['spektə(r)] n. 1. a ghostly appearing figure 2. a mental representation of some haunting experience.
Random good picture Not show
31. Looming large over all these doubts is the spectre of costs.
32. By 1903 the spectre of that environmental disaster had vanished.
33. Trevor Street had raised the spectre of the Bedford-St Pancras line.
34. The cultural move from an autonomous and independent sculpture back to the public sphere inevitably raises the spectre of popular culture.
35. Haunted by the spectre of Northern Soul, wrapped in perfect pop melodies and probably the best record this year.
36. For more than a decade, the spectre of the return of the hippy, of progressive rock, has haunted music-making.
37. With the spectre of a ruinous trade war looming which could spread like wildfire round the world.
38. The spectre of redundancy has been raised, and morale from top to bottom has become a cause for deep concern.
39. Another spectre of his too-vivid memory rose up to tempt him.
40. The attack has raised the spectre of another war between ice-cream operators in Glasgow.
40. Wish you can benefit from sentencedict.com and make progress everyday!
41. It was only after the reasonable harvest of 1922 that the spectre of nation-wide starvation receded.
42. The irrational spectre of money illusion is often seen to lie behind the complex facade of income-expenditure models derived from the system.
43. Some saw the irrational spectre of money illusion lurking menacingly in the wings.
44. But despite his absence his spectre dominates the campaign trail.
45. Loneliness flooded her like the bone-chilling spectre of the damned.
46. As if the countryside were not paranoid enough, along comes the spectre of foot and mouth disease.
47. What a spectre is that retreating sail!
48. The spectre of populism proved a mirage.
49. A spectre of Japanese militarism is haunting Asia.
50. What could have happened to that spectre?
51. Space, they argue, can still escape the spectre of combat.
52. Whenever biology meets behaviour the spectre of social Darwinism and eugenics looms menacingly in the background.
53. The six-day war is not over. Today, it brings the spectre of al-Qaida in Gaza.
54. The spectre of economic crisis is constantly haunting some countries.
55. No : SPECTRE . Special Executive for Counterintelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion.
56. Under his very eyes, unheard-of vision, he had a sort of representation of the most horrible moment of his life, enacted by his spectre.
57. In Elazig, an eastern city, a mob attacked a Kurdish neighbourhood, raising the spectre of inter-communal violence.
58. The spectre of neo-fascism, as he put it, was stalking the streets of Sofia and other big cities.
59. The spectre of a stronger yuan will, temporarily at least, worsen China's asset-price bubbliness, as foreign capital floods into the country in anticipation of a stronger currency.
60. Within this viewpoint, neo-Nazism has performed the role of all-purpose bogeyman, as a kind of sinister spectre of capitalism haunting both the margins and the impenetrable heart of society.
More similar words: electromagnetic spectrum, spectrum, aspect, inspect, specter, respect, suspect, prospect, respected, spectator, suspect of, spectacle, inspector, introspect, inspection, retrospect, prospectus, respective, disrespect, perspective, prospective, respectable, circumspect, spectacular, bespectacled, irrespective, respectively, retrospective, retrospection, disrespectful.