spook

گھوسٹ
definition
verb
they spooked a couple of grizzly bears
frighten; unnerve.
noun
Judge Steve Evans takes on these unspooky spooks and non-existent ghosts - and he doesn't mind one bit.
a ghost.
a CIA spook
a spy.
example
he'll 'spook' if we make any noise
The results were good enough to 'spook' the competition.
He's a joy as the completely amoral 'spook' who suddenly finds himself sliding out of his depth in a vortex of shifting loyalties.
The Pentagon vigorously opposes that recommendation, but even a rookie 'spook' can figure out that big changes are in the air.
Don't let the undeniably spooky DVD box art fool you: That toothy 'spook' only appears a few times and not in any sort of pervasive or effective manner.
a CIA 'spook'
Lillard is psychic, which means he can find a 'spook' if it gets out, except, when it comes to it, he can't.
But it is a policy that must be pursued on the quiet so as not to 'spook' the country's growing legion of foreign creditors.
he'll 'spook' if we make any noise
Even if he gives Congress such evidence in the next few weeks, how intelligent was it to 'spook' all our allies first and then drag out the evidence?
a CIA 'spook'
When the original pilot for The Dating Game goes nowhere, he is recruited by a CIA 'spook' and sent to Mexico to make his first kill.
I wouldn't let them operate or give me a shot until a 'spook' from our Embassy in Mexico City came down and stayed with me day and night in the bed next to me for four days.
Urban myths are the stuff of nightmares; the stories people tell to 'spook' each other, such as the two lovers in a remote lane, at a time when an escaped mental patient is on the loose.
They said that he only came out at night to eat cats and squirrels, and he was the local 'spook' .
A lip-reading 'spook' may be following an outdoor conversation through binoculars.
Upon returning to the U.S., Williams hears from a friend, an ex-Pentagon 'spook' named Ken Ritz.
A horror story's got to 'spook' you and intrigue you.
Oh, yeah a stupid Xmas 'spook' shows up to complete the episode's main purpose.
Perhaps at an even slower pace, with more stunning images and settings, this movie would really 'spook' .
Burke hooks Clayton in by suggesting that his father, who died under mysterious circumstances 10 years earlier, may actually have been a CIA 'spook' as well.
The tale 'spooked' the executives enough to make them reexamine their assumptions about oil price and supply.
Dredged from central casting are U.S. 'spooks' on a renegade mission to kill him.
Nevertheless, he acknowledges that the company struggled with execution issues and that his departure 'spooked' investors.
That sparked one of the few signs of rebellion at a hospital where the administration has moved gingerly to avoid 'spooking' doctors.
Ireland is, after all, the ancestral home of 'spooks' , goblins and faeries, and this piece seems haunted six times over.
Judge Steve Evans takes on these unspooky 'spooks' and non-existent ghosts - and he doesn't mind one bit.
That prospect is 'spooking' Japan's markets in the run-up to Upper House elections on July 11.
It isn't just the ill-timed expansion that's 'spooking' investors.
It somewhat 'spooked' Russell, according to the liner notes.
Credits: Google Translate