Horroroso in english
Horrifying
pronunciation: hɔrəfaɪɪŋ part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: hɔrəfaɪɪŋ part of speech: adjective
In gestures
horroroso = appalling ; frightful ; horrendous ; horrifying ; shocking ; horrible ; dreadful ; hellish ; grisly ; horrid ; yucky ; yukky .
Example: His article, 'The skeleton in the closet: public libraries art collections suffer appalling losses,' examines the problem of theft and mutilation of art materials in public libraries.Example: The book, written by a man who is not a military historian as such, is concerned above all with showing the war's hideousness, its frightful human cost, its pathos and loss, and its essential failure to achieve its objectives.Example: If we were confronted with the alternatives that Mr. Gorman described this morning, it would have been a horrendous undertaking.Example: The article 'A horrifying problem' examines the controversial issue about whether to remove books about satanism from the library shelves.Example: The author mentions several recent shocking revelations concerning the activities of the Japanese government and its officials.Example: Not saving the wildlife is too horrible to contemplate, but saving it will require us to accept harsh realities and abandon romantic notions.Example: The same author also wrote the book 'Serials deselection: a dreadful dilemma'.Example: The movie novel is about a trio of small-town guys who come across a wrecked plane containing a bag full of what they presume to be 'dirty money' and decide to hold onto it, with predictably hellish consequences.Example: Much of what he sees and shows his readers is grim, if not grisly.Example: The horrid thing broke out with a screeching laugh, and pointed his brown finger at me.Example: I saw Gina's post the other day where she said she feels 'fat and frumpish and yucky'.Example: All our perceptions are either of one thing or another A or B, yummy or yukky.