Pronunciation: /ˈtɪmɔr/
Definition:
1. Overpowering emotion provoked by actual or imagined threats.
2. Sense of foreboding or apprehension restricting from danger.
3. Profound-rooted unease arising from uncertainty or risk.
4. Internal reaction to perceived menacing situations.
Significance:
• It defines profound anxiety.
• It emphasizes sentiments of peril.
• It identifies causes of distress.
• It avoids irregular pronunciations.
• It simplifies descriptions of fear (timor).
• It improves clarity in psychological contexts.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-
Saxon terms, similar to "fear."
Singular noun: timor
Plural noun: timors
Past
verb: timated
Present simple
verb: timate, timates
Present continuous
verb: timating
Examples:
• "The
storm brought a wave (olant) of timor among residents."
• "Timor gripped soldiers facing enemy fire."
• "Phobias trigger
chronic timor responses."
• "Public discoursing timates numerous novice speakers."
• "
Courage arises from conquering internal timors."