Associations to the word «Spook»
Noun
- Ghost
- Cop
- Sat
- Stampede
- Apprentice
- Espionage
- Guy
- Chronicles
- Stuff
- Stile
- Fiend
- Halloween
- Cia
- Spy
- Farrell
- Hitchcock
- Bbc
- Herd
- Tick
- Striker
- Nanny
- Horse
- Meg
- Buster
- Chaser
- Foley
- Kat
- Gibson
- Ripper
- Running
- Roach
- Jacobs
- Witch
- Pearce
- Freighter
- Apparition
- Lure
- Vestige
- Ghosts
- Crap
- Myles
- Spying
- Rein
- Grenade
- Phantom
- Chasm
- Bane
- Marcia
- Alice
- Rhyme
- Cow
- Drama
- Erin
- Zoe
- Gaping
- Smuggler
- Folklore
- Panic
- Langley
- Brit
- Thicket
- Panda
- Assailant
- Dax
- Tom
- Fog
- Afterlife
- Noise
- Prescott
- Ellie
- Beak
- Mane
- Talon
- Fiona
- Terrorism
- Casualty
- Gregory
Adjective
Pictures for the word «Spook»
Wiktionary
SPOOK, noun. A spirit returning to haunt a place.
SPOOK, noun. A ghost or an apparition.
SPOOK, noun. A hobgoblin.
SPOOK, noun. (espionage) A spy.
SPOOK, noun. A scare or fright.
SPOOK, noun. (dated) (pejorative) A black person.
SPOOK, verb. To scare or frighten.
SPOOK, verb. To startle or frighten an animal
SPOOK OUT, verb. (transitive) to scare, to frighten
Dictionary definition
SPOOK, noun. Someone unpleasantly strange or eccentric.
SPOOK, noun. A mental representation of some haunting experience; "he looked like he had seen a ghost"; "it aroused specters from his past".
SPOOK, verb. Frighten or scare, and often provoke into a violent action; "The noise spooked the horse".
Wise words
When you have spoken the word, it reigns over you. When it
is unspoken you reign over it.