scarebug
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]scarebug (plural scarebugs)
- (obsolete) A bugbear; an imaginary monster to frighten children.
- 1862, Samuel Ward, Sermons and treatises, page 60:
- Is hell but a name and word, a scarebug for to keep fools in awe?
- 1912, Israel Zangwill, The Next Religion: A Play in Three Acts, page 50:
- You can't fright me with your scarebugs. I'm going to be cremated. That's real ashes to ashes.
- 1921, Edmund Peyton Lowe, American Principles, page 88:
- The argument is a mere scarebug of the opposition.
- 1961, T. B. Cunha, Goa's Freedom Struggle: Selected Writings of T. B. Cunha, page 87:
- As for painting, we have the portraits of Viceroys exhibited in the Government Council Hall, monstrous scarebugs made in series which may serve to terrorise our councillors.