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Panicky   /pˈænɪki/   Listen
adjective
panicky  adj.  Same as panic-stricken; as, the travellers became panicky as the snow deepened.
Synonyms: panic-stricken, panic-struck, petrified, terrified, frightened.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Panicky" Quotes from Famous Books



... village now. Troubled and stubborn, Sally stopped the car, and looked mutinously at her companion. The doctor's rosy face was flushed under his flaming hair, and in his very blue eyes was a look that struck her with an almost panicky sensation of surprise. Sally had never seen any man regard her with an expression of distaste before, but the doctor's ...
— Poor, Dear Margaret Kirby and Other Stories • Kathleen Norris

... been difficult. It was possible to get used to weightlessness while awake. One would slip, sometimes, and find himself suddenly tense and panicky because he'd abruptly noticed all over again that he was falling. But—and yet again Sally was partly responsible—the bunks were designed to help in that difficulty. Each bunk had an inflatable top blanket. ...
— Space Tug • Murray Leinster

... rank upon rank We rose from the trenches and swept like the gale, Till the rapid-fire guns got us fell on the flank And the murderin' bullets came swishin' like hail: Till a' that were left o' us faltered and broke; Till it seemed for a moment a panicky rout, When shrill through the fume and the flash and the smoke The wee valiant voice o' a whistle piped out. 'The Campbells are Comin'': Then into the fray We bounded wi' bayonets reekin' and raw, And oh we fair revelled in glory that day, ...
— Rhymes of a Red Cross Man • Robert W. Service

... or diminution of deposits of course reflects a confident and successful, or a panicky and impoverishing, state of ...
— A Brief History of Panics • Clement Juglar

... ran to the nearest rotting log, but one of the negroes was before him with a blazing pitch-pine splint. There was a respectful recoil in the opposing ranks which presently became a somewhat panicky surge to the rear. The shovelers, more than half of whom were negroes, had not come out to be blown from a cannon's mouth by a grim-faced veteran who was so palpably at home with the tools ...
— The Quickening • Francis Lynde


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