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    panic
    /ˈpanɪk/

    noun

    • 1. sudden uncontrollable fear or anxiety, often causing wildly unthinking behaviour: "she hit him in panic"

    verb

    • 1. feel or cause to feel panic: "the crowd panicked and stampeded for the exit" Similar be alarmedbe scaredbe nervousbe afraidOpposite relax

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. a sudden, strong feeling of anxiety or fear that prevents reasonable thought and action and may spread to influence many people: [ U ] When fire broke out, 602 people died in the panic that ensued.

  3. The meaning of PANIC is of, relating to, or resembling the mental or emotional state believed induced by the god Pan. How to use panic in a sentence. Did you know? Synonym Discussion of Panic.

  4. a sudden overwhelming fear, with or without cause, that produces hysterical or irrational behavior, and that often spreads quickly through a group of persons or animals. Synonyms: fear, alarm. an instance, outbreak, or period of such fear.

  5. a sudden, strong feeling of anxiety or fear that prevents reasonable thought and action and may spread to influence many people: [ U ] When fire broke out, 602 people died in the panic that ensued.

  6. 1. a sudden overwhelming feeling of terror or anxiety, esp one affecting a whole group of people. 2. (modifier) of or resulting from such terror: panic measures. vb, -ics, -icking or -icked.

  7. Panic is a very strong feeling of anxiety or fear, which makes you act without thinking carefully. An earthquake hit the capital, causing panic among the population. I phoned the doctor in a panic, worried about the pain in my chest. Synonyms: fear, alarm, horror, terror More Synonyms of panic.

  8. noun. /ˈpænɪk/. /ˈpænɪk/. [uncountable, countable, usually singular] Idioms. a sudden feeling of great fear that cannot be controlled and prevents you from thinking clearly. a moment of panic. They were in a state of panic.

  9. to suddenly feel so worried or frightened that you cannot think or behave calmly, or to make someone feel this way: Don't panic, we've got plenty of time. You panicked me by telling me I was late. (Definition of panic from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Translations of panic. in Chinese (Traditional)

  10. People panic when they lose control over themselves because of fear, stress, or danger. A pilot who runs into turbulence and then flees from the cockpit has panicked. A surgeon who makes a mistake might panic for a second, before chilling out and helping the patient.

  11. to suddenly feel frightened so that you cannot think clearly and you say or do something stupid, dangerous, etc.; to make somebody do this. I panicked when I saw smoke coming out of the engine. panic somebody/something The gunfire panicked the horses.