Terror in a sentence as a noun

Its not desiring the fall; its terror of the flames.

Deep, deep terror he was struggling to conceal.

There was only one emotion he showed when I revealed I knew, and it was terror.

The war on terror is a giant hoax, more people are killed every year choking on peanut butter.

If this is true doesn't it mean that Bin Laden won the war on terror?Every time I go to the airport I think this.

The last US trained mission in 2006 to capture Kony resulted in a months long terror campaign by the LRA that killed hundreds[2]5.

Youd have to have personally been trapped and felt flames to really understand a terror way beyond falling.

But beyond the terror you could see, there was nothing -- just pure cold and calculating rational self-serving thought.

The Obama administration has adopted terror as a method of war - they have become what they set out to fight.

From the American perspective, 9-11 was a terrorist attack and Pearl Harbor wasn't, even though they both inspired terror.

The variable here is the other terror, the fires flames: when the flames get close enough, falling to death becomes the slightly less terrible of two terrors.

The way America is conducting the war on terror is both self-defeating and morally repugnant.

9-11 inspired terror because there was nothing to fight back against--it was people who were quite demonstrably willing to get killed in order to achieve their objective.

We talk about 'terrorism' a lot. Obviously all warefare inspires terror--but what makes an attack a terrorist attack?

The public would be wise to feel genuine terror at the thought of a police force that consists of the kinds of people who actually enjoy the kind torture described in this article.

Compare it to American reaction to domestic terrorism before 9/11 and we may start to have some actual merit in the comparison.

Nobody is safe, because anyone might be standing next to someone on Obama's list at some point, and the general terror and hate instilled by these methods will continually generate new enemies.

The inexorable nature of that kind of attack inspires a particular fear, and attacks specifically designed to inspire that fear are considered terrorist attacks.

When due process is undermined, the population becomes more alienated from the government, and more individuals become radicalized, and more terrorism happens.

Terror definitions

noun

an overwhelming feeling of fear and anxiety

See also: panic affright

noun

a person who inspires fear or dread; "he was the terror of the neighborhood"

See also: scourge threat

noun

a very troublesome child

See also: brat

noun

the use of extreme fear in order to coerce people (especially for political reasons); "he used terror to make them confess"