scare off
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Verb (transitive):
- To cause someone or something to lose courage, enthusiasm, or resolve, typically by inducing fear, intimidation, or discouragement. The action results in the target retreating, withdrawing, or abandoning an intention.
Usage
- The verb "scare off" is used to describe the act of frightening or discouraging someone/something so that they go away or decide not to do something. It is a phrasal verb where "off" indicates the resulting movement away or cessation.
- It typically takes a direct object (the person or thing being scared away).
- Common Structures:
scare off [someone/something][someone/something] is scared off by [something]
Examples
Active Voice:
- The loud noise scared off the birds from the feeder.
- High prices are scaring off potential buyers in the current market.
- She didn't want his aggressive attitude to scare off new investors.
Passive Voice:
- The protesters were scared off by the police presence.
- Many applicants are scared off by the lengthy and complex form.
Advanced Usage
- "to scare someone/something off of something": To deter from a specific place, activity, or idea.
- The security guard's dog scared the teenagers off of the private property.
- A few bad reviews shouldn't scare you off of trying the new restaurant.
Variants and Related Words
- Scare away: A synonym with identical meaning and usage.
- The bright lights scared the deer away.
- Frighten off: A more formal synonym.
- The sudden movement frightened off the intruder.
- Deter: (Verb) To discourage or prevent from acting, often through doubt or fear of consequences. This is a close synonym but is not a phrasal verb.
- The risk of fines is meant to deter illegal parking.
Synonyms
- Intimidate: To frighten or overawe, especially to make them do what one wants.
- Daunt: To make someone feel intimidated or apprehensive.
- Discourage: To cause someone to lose confidence or enthusiasm.
- Disperse: To cause to spread over a wide area; to scatter (often used for groups).
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Scare up: To find or obtain something with difficulty, often through resourcefulness. (Note: This is a different phrasal verb with a distinct meaning).
- I'll try to scare up some extra chairs for the meeting.
Related Idioms
- To scare the pants off (someone): To frighten someone very much.
- That horror movie scared the pants off me! (This idiom emphasizes extreme fear, while "scare off" focuses on causing retreat.)
Verb
- cause to lose courage
- dashed by the refusal