Spookyadjective
(informal) Eerie, or suggestive of ghosts or the supernatural.
Eerieadjective
strange, weird, fear-inspiring.
‘The eerie sounds seemed to come from the graveyard after midnight.’;
Spookyadjective
(informal) Spooked; afraid; frightened.
Eerieadjective
(Scotland) frightened, timid.
Spookyadjective
(informal) Unpredictably excitable; skittish (used especially of horses).
Eerieadjective
Serving to inspire fear, esp. a dread of seeing ghosts; wild; weird; as, eerie stories.
‘She whose elfin prancer springsBy night to eery warblings.’;
Spookyadjective
suggestive of the supernatural; mysterious;
‘an eerie feeling of deja vu’;
Eerieadjective
Affected with fear; affrighted.
Spookyadjective
unpredictably excitable (especially of horses)
Eerieadjective
suggestive of the supernatural; mysterious;
‘an eerie feeling of deja vu’;
Eerieadjective
so strange as to inspire a feeling of fear;
‘an uncomfortable and eerie stillness in the woods’; ‘an eerie midnight howl’;
Eerie
Eerie was an American magazine of horror comics introduced in 1966 by Warren Publishing. Like Mad, it was a black-and-white magazine intended for newsstand distribution and did not submit its stories to the comic book industry's voluntary Comics Code Authority.