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eerie (adj.)

also eery, c. 1300, "timid, affected by superstitious fear," north England and Scottish variant of Old English earg "cowardly, fearful, wretched; slow, indolent, useless," from Proto-Germanic *arh- (source also of Old Frisian erg "evil, bad," Middle Dutch arch "bad," Dutch arg, Old High German arg "cowardly, worthless," German arg "bad, wicked," Old Norse argr "unmanly, voluptuous," Swedish arg "malicious"). Sense of "causing fear because of strangeness" is first attested 1792. Finnish arka "cowardly" is a Germanic loan-word.

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Definitions of eerie from WordNet

eerie (adj.)
suggestive of the supernatural; mysterious;
an eerie feeling of deja vu
eerie (adj.)
inspiring a feeling of fear; strange and frightening;
an uncomfortable and eerie stillness in the woods
an eerie midnight howl
Synonyms: eery
From wordnet.princeton.edu