frightening - определение. Что такое frightening
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Что (кто) такое frightening - определение

1970 STUDIO ALBUM BY DAVID BOWIE
Running Gun Blues; Saviour Machine (song); Lightning Frightening; Metrobolist
  • Cane Hill]] in 2009. The asylum appeared on the cover of the 1970 American release.
  • Several tracks, including "The Supermen", reflect the ideals of [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] ''(pictured in 1869)''.
Найдено результатов: 31
frightening      
adj.
1) frightening to + inf. (it's frightening to even contemplate such a possibility)
2) frightening that + clause (it's frightening that a war could break out at any time)
Frightening      
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Frighten.
frightening      
If something is frightening, it makes you feel afraid, anxious, or nervous.
It was a very frightening experience and they were very courageous...
The number of youngsters involved in crime is frightening.
= alarming
ADJ
frighteningly
The country is frighteningly close to possessing nuclear weapons.
ADV: usu ADV adj
frighten      
(frightens, frightening, frightened)
1.
If something or someone frightens you, they cause you to suddenly feel afraid, anxious, or nervous.
He knew that Soli was trying to frighten him, so he smiled to hide his fear...
Most children are frightened by the sight of blood.
= scare
VERB: V n, V n
2.
If something frightens the life out of you, frightens the wits out of you, or frightens you out of your wits, it causes you to feel suddenly afraid or gives you a very unpleasant shock.
Fairground rides are intended to frighten the life out of you.
PHRASE: V inflects [emphasis]
Frightened         
  • A prisoner at [[Abu Graib]] shows fear of a US army dog during prisoner abuse.
  • A still from the film ''[[Carnival of Souls]]''.
  • Painting by [[Guido Reni]] c. 1611
  • "The Man Made Mad with Fear", a painting  by [[Gustave Courbet]].
EMOTION INDUCED BY PERCEIVED DANGER OR THREAT
Fears; Fearful; Frightfulness; Scare; Terrour; Fear (from a Moral Standpoint); Fear (in Canon Law); Phear; Frightful; Scaring; Afeard; Fear of the unknown; Apprehension (fear); Fear reaction; Feared; Fearfulness; Afeared; Afear; Afears; Afearing; Scares; Terror (emotion); Causes of fear; Dread (fear); Fright (fear); 😨; Frightened; Scared; Irrational fear (unknown); Manipulation of fear; Religion and fear
·Impf of Frighten.
frighten      
¦ verb cause to be afraid.
?(frighten someone off) drive someone away by frightening them.
Derivatives
frightened adjective
frightening adjective
frighteningly adverb
frighten      
v.
1) (d; tr.) to frighten into (to frighten smb. into submission)
2) (d; tr.) to frighten out of (to frighten smb. out of doing smt.)
3) (misc.) to frighten smb. to death
frighteningly      
Frighten      
·vt To disturb with fear; to throw into a state of alarm or fright; to Affright; to Terrify.
frightener      
¦ noun a frightening person or thing.
?Brit. informal a member of a criminal gang who intimidates its victims.
Phrases
put the frighteners on Brit. informal threaten or intimidate (someone).

Википедия

The Man Who Sold the World (album)

The Man Who Sold the World is the third studio album by English musician David Bowie. It was originally released through Mercury Records in the United States on 4 November 1970 and in the United Kingdom on 10 April 1971. The album was produced by Tony Visconti and recorded at Trident and Advision Studios in London during April and May 1970. It features the first appearances on a Bowie record of guitarist Mick Ronson and drummer Mick Woodmansey, who would later become famous as members of the Spiders from Mars.

Following the largely acoustic and folk rock sound of Bowie's previous 1969 self-titled album, The Man Who Sold the World marked a shift toward hard rock, with elements of blues rock. The lyrics are also darker than his previous releases, exploring themes of insanity, religion, technology and war. None of the songs from the album were released as official singles, although some tracks appeared as B-sides of singles between 1970 and 1973. Originally titled Metrobolist, a play on Fritz Lang's 1927 film Metropolis, the title was changed at the last minute by Mercury without Bowie's consultation.

The album was released with different cover artwork in the US and the UK. For the US release, the artwork was a cartoon-like drawing of a cowboy in front of an asylum. It was drawn by Michael J. Weller and based on an image of actor John Wayne. Bowie was unenthusiastic about the cover, so he enlisted Keith MacMillan to shoot an alternate cover. The final image, featuring Bowie wearing a blue dress designed by fashion designer Michael Fish, was used as the cover for the UK release. The Man Who Sold the World was reissued by RCA Records in 1972, featuring a black-and-white picture of Bowie's then-current character Ziggy Stardust on the sleeve, but reissues since 1990 have revived the original UK artwork.

The Man Who Sold the World was originally better received by music critics in the US than in the UK. Nevertheless, it was a commercial failure in both countries; however, the 1972 reissue managed to chart in both the US and the UK. Retrospectively, the album has been praised by critics for the band's performance and the unsettling nature of its music and lyrics, being considered by many to be the start of Bowie's "classic period". It has since been reissued multiple times and was remixed in 2020, under its original title Metrobolist, for its 50th anniversary.