• There is no subject that intrigues, repels, frightens, confuses, inspires, contradicts and exasperates Americans more than race.

    NPR: 'Crash' Expands Cinema's Exploration of Race

  • What most frightens those wondering about the extent of Vietnam's banking crisis is the thought that maybe nobody knows.

    ECONOMIST: Banking in Vietnam

  • All this frightens lawyer and privacy crusader Jeremy Gruber, who heads the nonprofit Council for Responsible Genetics in New York.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • When weighing your options, ask yourself a question: is this choice driven more by what inspires me, or by what frightens me?

    FORBES: The Parmenides Fallacy: Are You Ignoring the Cost of Inaction?

  • But until they take responsibility for the gun violence that so frightens their fellow citizens, they're setting themselves up for more regulation.

    WSJ: Why Our Gun Debate Is Off Target

  • Followed by a small band of raggedy travellers, including a woman who is pregnant, the father frightens the group into abandoning camp.

    ECONOMIST: New fiction

  • It is that level of convenience and efficiency that frightens retailers.

    FORBES: Will Nook HD Succumb to Amazon's Supremacy?

  • It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us.

    FORBES: Why Your New Year's Resolution Will Fail by February 1

  • The blogs' vituperative retaliation frightens some victims, such as a corporate recruiter in Malaysia who talked to FORBES but asked to go unnamed in this story.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Language like this frightens those who see the NHS as a health-care system driven purely by response to need, rather than by hard calculation about cost.

    ECONOMIST: NHS reform

  • The channel, which had a home on the Sky Satellite platform, has been claiming to have been banned since October, saying it frightens the UK establishment.

    FORBES: Press TV and the Freedom of the Press

  • It frightens me but I try to give myself courage.

    BBC

  • This prospect also frightens the Germans and the British.

    ECONOMIST: The EU's agricultural policy

  • If street food frightens you, try New World Park, a spic-and-span modern hawker "mall" where you can often find families eating out for the night - always a sign of good hygiene - and food from across Malaysia.

    BBC: Penang: Malaysia in miniature

  • What frightens Razieh, for example, who is fully garbed in the chador, is that her husband, an unemployed hothead by the name of Hodjat (Shahab Hosseini), will discover what kind of job she has taken, and her fear is well founded.

    NEWYORKER: Tehran Tales

  • What frightens her is the possibility that we will become so immobilised by dreams and shadows, so free of pain, mentally standardised by the cyber-world that is our principal habitat and rendered oblivious by chemicals, that we will have lost the ability to choose.

    ECONOMIST: The future

  • But an election frightens many.

    ECONOMIST: Italy

  • Mr. ANDRAE CROUCH (Musician): That's sort of the way that I feel right now, because I think that because of a lot of the secular music - a lot of it, I feel, kind of frightens people, because of some of the artists and their lifestyles.

    NPR: Gospel Singer Andrae Crouch: 'Mighty Wind'

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