Scared, frightened, afraid and terrified

We often teach our students about adjectives of feelings or emotions that can be formed with -ed to describe people and -ing to describe the things that cause the feelings and emotions.
Frightened and frightening are good examples:
The noises were frightening. / It was dark and I was frightened.
The same pattern works for the more emphatic adjectives terrified and terrifying:
The storm was terrifying. / She’s terrified of dogs.
However, we do not use this pattern for scared or afraid. Something that makes us scared is scary and there is no related adjective for afraid:
The high waves were really scary. / He’s scared of the dark. I’m afraid of flying.
Scared, frightened and terrified all have related verbs: scare, frighten, terrify:
Don’t shout – you’ll frighten the children. The masks were designed to terrify their enemies.
However, there is no verb associated with afraid.
Scared, frightened, afraid and terrified are probably the most common adjectives to describe feeling fear, but if you want to broaden your vocabulary, there are many other useful alternatives.
Petrified is a very strong word, and also has the corresponding word petrifying:
Jumping out of the plane was petrifying. / I was absolutely petrified.
We often make the word scared stronger by saying we are scared stiff, and if someone is so scared that they cannot think clearly and do not know what to do, we can say that they arepanic-stricken.
If someone is slightly afraid of something that is going to happen in the future, we could describe them as apprehensive. A timid person is shy and nervous, while a more negative word for someone who is not brave is cowardly, usually implying that they were too scared to do what was morally right.

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