Find the word definition

Crossword clues for startle

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
startle
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a startling contrast (=very noticeable and surprising)
▪ The big modern factories make a startling contrast to the opposite side of the road.
a startling discovery (=very surprising)
▪ When they examined the virus, they made a startling discovery.
a surprising/startling conclusion
▪ After years of research, he reached a startling conclusion.
startling originality (=used about something so new and different that it surprises you)
▪ We were amazed by the startling originality of his thinking.
startling revelations
startling revelations about his background
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
most
▪ The most startling and lyrical passage is the description of how Dolores was burnt as a baby.
▪ In perhaps his most startling and disturbing model, Thompson created two scenarios.
▪ What's the most startling stash you've found in some one's house?
▪ And, most startling of all, it was an age when people did not kill each other.
▪ The most startling example of how that power works is the story of Anna Chennault and the 1968 election.
rather
▪ Here's an early, and rather startling, example of the genre.
▪ This is a rather startling admission from a noted tough guy.
▪ Curtis' incipiently multiracial ideas seemed at first rather startling to some other members of the Round.
▪ We proceed from A to B via a rather startling reductio ad absurdum.
so
▪ I am sorry my voice is so startling to you.
▪ He was so startled that he dropped the drill.
▪ She is so startled and afraid that she complies.
▪ Perhaps the image is just so startling that it sticks in our minds.
▪ Her beauty was so startling that it mysteriously approached the comic.
▪ Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback Rod Woodson was so startled by the sign that he sought out the fan who wrote it.
▪ It's the combination of negative factors that makes this situation so startling.
■ NOUN
sound
▪ Ian scrutinised the key board closely but was suddenly startled by the shrill sound of the telephone ringing.
▪ For an instant, startled by that snapping sound, he thought he had trodden on a twig.
▪ He was so engrossed in himself that he was startled by the sound of the back door opening just after midnight.
voice
▪ I am sorry my voice is so startling to you.
▪ The too familiar husky female voice startled her into full wakefulness.
▪ The sound of his voice startled me.
■ VERB
look
▪ The small, soft sound took a while to register, and when it did she looked up, startled.
▪ I looked up, startled to find how I had forgotten everything but the antics of these two monstrous beings.
▪ We went into the dining room and Polly looked up, startled.
▪ They look startled at first to see me, a gaijin, but then go about their business.
▪ They looked startled, and exchanged glances.
▪ He looked up startled into their laughter.
seem
▪ Though winded, the impact seemed to startle him into a state of panic.
▪ We both seemed equally startled to see each other.
▪ The effect of this vision on the handful of monks returning to the monastery might seem a little startling.
▪ Curtis' incipiently multiracial ideas seemed at first rather startling to some other members of the Round.
▪ That the bulk of the first new wave of Wirral's heroin users obtained heroin from a single source might seem startling.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Any unexpected movements can startle the animal, so it must be approached slowly and steadily.
▪ I'm sorry. I didn't mean to startle you.
▪ The noise startled him, and he dropped his glass on the floor.
▪ You startled me! I didn't hear you come in.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ He was startled out of this sombre reflection by the sudden awareness that something was Not Quite Right.
▪ She startled people on arrival in Washington in 1932 by calling a news conference before her husband.
▪ That startled him and she fell out of bed to get out of his way.
▪ The peacocks are startled out of the shade into the sunlight.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Startle

Startle \Star"tle\ (st[aum]r"t'l), v. i. [imp. & p. p. Startled (st[aum]r"t'ld); p. pr. & vb. n. Startling (st[aum]r"tl[i^]ng).] [Freq. of start.] To move suddenly, or be excited, on feeling alarm; to start.

Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
--Addison.

Startle

Startle \Star"tle\ (st[aum]r"t'l), v. t.

  1. To excite by sudden alarm, surprise, or apprehension; to frighten suddenly and not seriously; to alarm; to surprise.

    The supposition, at least, that angels do sometimes assume bodies need not startle us.
    --Locke.

  2. To deter; to cause to deviate. [R.]
    --Clarendon.

    Syn: To start; shock; fright; frighten; alarm.

Startle

Startle \Star"tle\, n. A sudden motion or shock caused by an unexpected alarm, surprise, or apprehension of danger.

After having recovered from my first startle, I was very well pleased with the accident.
--Spectator.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
startle

c.1300, "run to and fro" (intransitive), frequentative of sterten (see start (v.)). Sense of "move suddenly in surprise or fear" first recorded 1520s. Transitive meaning "frighten suddenly" is from 1590s. The word retains more of the original meaning of start (v.). Related: Startled; startling; startlingly. As a noun from 1714.

Wiktionary
startle

n. A sudden motion or shock caused by an unexpected alarm, surprise, or apprehension of danger. vb. 1 (label en intransitive) To move suddenly, or be excited, on feeling alarm; to start. 2 (label en transitive) To excite by sudden alarm, surprise, or apprehension; to frighten suddenly and not seriously; to alarm; to surprise.

WordNet
startle

n. a sudden involuntary movement; "he awoke with a start" [syn: jump, start]

startle
  1. v. to stimulate to action ; "..startled him awake"; "galvanized into action" [syn: galvanize, galvanise]

  2. move or jump suddenly, as if in surprise or alarm; "She startled when I walked into the room" [syn: jump, start]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "startle".

The eloquent allocutions addressed to the masses which Bonaparte had, as it were, invented, produced effects in those days of patriotism and miracle that were absolutely startling.

These facts of allotropism have some corollaries connected with them rather startling to us of the nineteenth century.

Lydia still had not looked at Ambry except for that first startled moment of recognition.

The mamuti, anticipating the need for explanations to relieve the anxieties caused by this startling innovation, had mentally searched the theoretical construct of their metaphysical world for answers that would satisfy.

While these unfinished exclamations were actually passing my lips I chanced to cross that infernal mat, and it is no more startling than true, but at my word a quiver of expectation ran through that gaunt web--a rustle of anticipation filled its ancient fabric, and one frayed corner surged up, and as I passed off its surface in my stride, the sentence still unfinished on my lips, wrapped itself about my left leg with extraordinary swiftness and so effectively that I nearly fell into the arms of my landlady, who opened the door at the moment and came in with a tray and the steak and tomatoes mentioned more than once already.

The idea that this Antler might be opposed to her captivity startled her, and she lowered her voice and spoke in a more moderate tone.

So that the day he took possession of his apartments, and looked over his bills, he made the startling discovery that this short apprenticeship of Paris had cost him fifty-thousand francs, one-fourth of his fortune.

Usually she was far ahead of him in her shrewd analysis of the astronaut program, and her witty observations on the other men of the Solid Six were startling in their perceptions.

After a startled moment, the banksman took it, gave a hasty shake, then touched the brim of his hat.

He had seen the city before, had battled on this very plain, but he had never heard the wind whisper through the valley as it did today, and the sound startled him.

Little by little, Bernard lost the feeling of having been startled, and began to perceive that he could reason about his trouble.

Bland were under discussion, Bland himself was busy with his trousers, which were showing an alarming inclination to make startling revelations.

She quickly scanned the startled pedestrians, slowed down by the galvanizing shout which had caught the attention of even blasé New York night strollers.

Now, because he was lost in the urgency of her embrace, the blat of a horn startled him so badly he jumped.

The entire first page of this special edition was taken up with the photograph of Bruno and Boots at the cannon, looking startled and guilty.