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Alarm   /əlˈɑrm/   Listen
Alarm

noun
1.
Fear resulting from the awareness of danger.  Synonyms: consternation, dismay.
2.
A device that signals the occurrence of some undesirable event.  Synonyms: alarm system, warning device.
3.
An automatic signal (usually a sound) warning of danger.  Synonyms: alarum, alert, warning signal.
4.
A clock that wakes a sleeper at some preset time.  Synonym: alarm clock.
verb
(past & past part. alarmed; pres. part. alarming)
1.
Fill with apprehension or alarm; cause to be unpleasantly surprised.  Synonyms: appal, appall, dismay, horrify.  "The news of the executions horrified us"
2.
Warn or arouse to a sense of danger or call to a state of preparedness.  Synonym: alert.  "We alerted the new neighbors to the high rate of burglaries"



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"Alarm" Quotes from Famous Books



... bird after another until his shafts are exhausted, when he climbs down, draws out the arrows from the bodies of the birds killed, and climbs up again to repeat the operation. As the light darts used make no sound, the birds seldom take the alarm, and are too busily engaged with the berries to notice their comrades dropping to the ground from time to time, and pay but slight attention even to ...
— Seventh Annual Report • Various

... said. "I know it. As soon as there was an alarm—as soon as Mike yelled out that the prisoner had escaped, I legged it for the cabin, and I found Turner just waking up from his sleep. He had no hand ...
— A Woman at Bay - A Fiend in Skirts • Nicholas Carter

... sure the giant was dead, the boy felt his way toward the opening that led to the middle cavern. The entrance was narrow and the darkness was intense, but, feeling braver now, the boy stepped boldly forward. Instantly the floor began to sink beneath him and in great alarm he turned and made a leap that enabled him to grasp the rocky sides of the wall and regain a footing in the passage through which he ...
— Rinkitink in Oz • L. Frank Baum

... report that the major suddenly stopped his snoring, and springing to his feet in a state of great confusion, began to call out at the top of his voice that the sloop was sinking. But he as suddenly regained his senses, and called to mind the honors that were to be paid him, he felt great alarm lest he had overslept himself, and besought Captain Luke Snider, who turned out of his berth at the same moment, to run upon deck and say he was not quite ready to receive them. But as Captain Luke took no heed of his request, and thought only of getting into port, the major, ...
— The Life and Adventures of Maj. Roger Sherman Potter • "Pheleg Van Trusedale"

... few years later, and, writing to Lady Hesketh, lamented: "I shall never see Weston more. I have been tossed like a ball into a far country, from which there is no rebound for me." Who but the little recluse of a little world could think of Norfolk as a far country and shake with alarm before the "tremendous ...
— The Art of Letters • Robert Lynd


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