Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    apprehension
    /ˌaprɪˈhɛnʃn/

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Learn the meaning of apprehension in English, with synonyms, antonyms, and usage examples. Apprehension can mean worry, catching, or understanding, depending on the context.

  3. Learn the various meanings and uses of the word apprehension, from suspicion or fear to seizure by legal process. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related entries.

  4. Apprehension can mean fear or anxiety over what may happen, the act of capturing or arresting, or the faculty of understanding. Learn more about its origin, usage, and related words.

  5. Apprehension is fear or anxiety about something, like the apprehension you feel about an upcoming test. Apprehension is also the capture of a criminal — that is, when the criminal is apprehended. Finally, apprehension can mean one's understanding of an idea.

  6. apprehension is an active state of fear, usually of some danger or misfortune: apprehension before opening an email. anxiety is a somewhat prolonged state of apprehensive worry: anxiety because of a reduced income. misgiving implies a dubious uncertainty or suspicion, as well as uneasiness: to have misgivings about an investment.

  7. Learn the meaning of apprehension as a noun, with synonyms, pronunciation and usage notes. Find out the difference between apprehension as worry or fear and apprehension as arresting somebody.

  8. 1. Apprehension is a feeling of fear that something bad may happen. [formal] [...] 2. The apprehension of someone who is thought to be a criminal is their capture or arrest by the police. [formal] [...] 3. The apprehension of something is awareness and understanding of it. [formal] [...]

  1. People also search for