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scare (v.)

1590s, alteration of Middle English skerren (c. 1200), from Old Norse skirra "to frighten; to shrink from, shun; to prevent, avert," related to skjarr "timid, shy, afraid of," of unknown origin. In Scottish also skair, skar, and in dialectal English skeer, skear, which seems to preserve the older pronunciation. To scare up "procure, obtain" is first recorded 1846, American English, from notion of rousing game from cover. Related: Scared; scaring.

scare (n.)

"something that frightens; sudden panic, sudden terror inspired by a trifling cause, false alarm," 1520s, alteration of Middle English sker "fear, dread" (c. 1400), from scare (v.). Scare tactic attested from 1948.

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Definitions of scare from WordNet
1
scare (v.)
cause fear in;
Synonyms: frighten / fright / affright
scare (v.)
cause to lose courage;
Synonyms: daunt / dash / scare off / pall / frighten off / scare away / frighten away
2
scare (n.)
sudden mass fear and anxiety over anticipated events;
a war scare
a bomb scare led them to evacuate the building
Synonyms: panic
scare (n.)
a sudden attack of fear;
Synonyms: panic attack
From wordnet.princeton.edu