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unnerve
[ uhn-nurv ]
verb (used with object)
- to deprive of courage, strength, determination, or confidence; upset:
Fear unnerved him.
unnerve
/ ʌnˈnɜːv /
verb
- tr to cause to lose courage, strength, confidence, self-control, etc
Example Sentences
Even though the stock market rebounded somewhat in the ensuing days, the swiftness of the sharp decline left many investors unnerved.
Take for instance the recent protests in Lagos, which have left many in the tech scene unnerved.
That helps explain why some investors, unnerved by the whiff of desperation surrounding the deal, reached for the ejection handle on Monday.
Especially the raspberry rye cookies just sort of unnerve me.
The previous wave of excitement over the path integral in the ’80s, driven by Hawking’s work, fizzled out in part because theorists were unnerved by the accumulation of approximations.
More likely, it would make noises or take steps to unnerve peace with Israel in the Sinai just to show us up.
Yesterday, China Daily reported that the collapse of the boom on the crane “may unnerve some Chinese buyers.”
It did not reflect two decades of hostility and would unnerve our respective friends and publics.
And it could unnerve the establishment—including the powerful Army.
Part of her secret is her certitude, which is enough to unnerve most people.
By old rule, you ought not to look down in crossing such a place, lest the sight of the torrent whirling below should unnerve you.
The groping darkness seemed to unnerve him more than anything else now—that and the awful stillness under his feet.
But the truth was, he acknowledged, settling back in the chair, that the situation was threatening to unnerve him completely.
The words almost unnerve John; he has a feeling that perhaps Heaven means to be kind and allow him the bliss he craves.
It staggered Ramsay and sent him reeling, but it did not unnerve him.
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