How do you spell afraid




















However nowadays afraid is simplified to one f , probably because of the fact, that double f was pronounced as one. Therefore afraid is the correct form. Ask your question in our comments section below we reply to all comments within 24 hours or return to main search. Your comment will appear after it has been approved it takes usually up to 6 hours. I'm afraid I disagree with you on several counts. I'm afraid those days are gone and they'll never come again. My culinary skills are rather limited , I'm afraid!

Grammar Afraid. She was afraid, but never thought of quitting. Examples of afraid. They winced under their wry faces, afraid to stand and afraid to run away. From the Cambridge English Corpus. Of course, people were afraid to talk out loud. Instead of being afraid , the curious nature of children incites them to play. He told me that he wasn't afraid of death, only the process of getting there, because in the absence of life, there is no experience.

Nino is not merely afraid ; he is incompetent. They are not afraid to risk ridicule in the pursuit of true representation. How do we avoid going wrong because we think we understand or because we are afraid we might not? Why are you afraid of a nuclear attack? I am afraid , however, that many potential readers will be deterred by the style of its presentation. We should not be afraid to test these new data and concepts.

Apart from physical dangers falls, scalds, and so on , being ' at home ' may mean being lonely, isolated and afraid. Both were afraid not only of alienating allies, but also of vagrancy and chaos within their domains. He even offered her a piece of land, she says, which she declined because she was afraid it would cause trouble in the family.

I think he was afraid what he might pass on to you. Until then, some of them had expressed their criticism in secret, afraid of being labelled as enemies of the state. See all examples of afraid. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Test your vocabulary with our question quiz! Love words? Need even more definitions?

Homophones, Homographs, and Homonyms The same, but different. Merriam-Webster's Words of the Week - Nov.

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