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nightmare

/ˌnaɪtˈmɛər/
/ˈnaɪtmɛə/
IPA guide

Other forms: nightmares

If you wake with a start after a terrifying dream, you've had a nightmare.

A nightmare is not just a bad dream — it's seriously scary or upsetting. You can also use nightmare to describe something terrible that happens during the day. Your run-in with a skunk in your back yard might be a nightmare, for example, or your humiliating experience forgetting your lines in a play. In the late thirteenth century, a nightmare was "an evil female spirit afflicting sleepers with a feeling of suffocation," from the Old English word mare, "incubus or goblin."

Definitions of nightmare
  1. noun
    a terrifying or deeply upsetting dream
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    type of:
    dream, dreaming
    a series of mental images and emotions occurring during sleep
  2. noun
    a situation resembling a terrifying dream
    synonyms: incubus
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    type of:
    situation
    a complex or critical or unusual difficulty
Pronunciation
US
/ˌnaɪtˈmɛər/
UK
/ˈnaɪtmɛə/
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DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘nightmare'. Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors. Send us feedback
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