Worried in a sentence as an adjective

"Or am I alone in thinking that helping a stranger find their next caffeine fix is not what we should be worried about in today's world?

I, who collaborated with a friend on one small part of the assignment, got worried and came in to see you during office hours.

Maybe we're all standing around worried but nobody says anything because it would ruin our carefully tended never-fail image.

I may not be extravagant, but I don't want to miss any wonderful opportunity because I was too worried about my bank balance.

However, protection against artificially constructed attacks is not the only thing which I am worried about.

I wouldn't leave my room for weeks on end; on a few occasions I was so successfully reclusive that people worried that I disappeared or died called the police to investigate.

I'm worried that to people unfamiliar with modern crypto, the diagram of your protocol and the "technical FAQ" might sound credible or even convincing.

While nearly everyone else was focused on more mundane concerns of immediate importance, he was worried and tried to warn us about long-term, higher-order, societal consequences.

I was worried that Snowden's father was going to continue, through his attorney, to try and dissuade his terrified son from persisting in his convictions; thus, I was preparing to be disappointed in his father's loyalty.

But if I were running the iOS show at Apple, I'd probably be worried about this development: if the visual presence of the OS disappears entirely from apps, it becomes that much less scary to pick up an Android phone because the apps won't look any different there.

But in a Europe coming out of feudalism where they were trying to define national loyalties and borders, worried about losing territory to the neighboring country, worried about all sorts of things that look foolish from a modern perspective, well, if Jews weren't going to care if they were Polish or Russian, that was a huge problem.

Worried definitions

adjective

afflicted with or marked by anxious uneasiness or trouble or grief; "too upset to say anything"; "spent many disquieted moments"; "distressed about her son's leaving home"; "lapsed into disturbed sleep"; "worried parents"; "a worried frown"; "one last worried check of the sleeping children"

See also: disquieted distressed disturbed upset

adjective

mentally upset over possible misfortune or danger etc; "apprehensive about her job"; "not used to a city and worried about small things"; "felt apprehensive about the consequences"

See also: apprehensive