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How To Use Scare off In A Sentence

  • U.S. companies fear the red tape will scare off customers.
  • The business community rallied to him for fear that Duke's election would scare off tourism and outside investors.
  • Consider using a signature color to identify your women-friendly products - not pink please, you don't want to scare off men or offend women.
  • Follow E-MOM's priceless tips and you too could internet stalk your child and scare off those undesirable and "trampy" love interests. Mashable!
  • The recall isn't enough to scare off Charles Mettler, who ordered an eggs Benedict on Tuesday when he stopped by Drake Diner's in Des Moines, Iowa.
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  • The new Democratic Party is not likely to scare off voters.
  • They are used to scare off rather than kill the unwanted birds. Times, Sunday Times
  • The business community rallied to him for fear that Duke's election would scare off tourism and outside investors.
  • A chihuahua out for a walk in the park suffered scratches and a talon puncture when it was attacked by a hawk trained in a New York City program to scare off pigeons and rodents.
  • A past initiative to scare off the army of rhesus macaques with ultrahigh-frequency loudspeakers didn't work. Globe and Mail
  • A past initiative to scare off the army of rhesus macaques with ultrahigh-frequency loudspeakers didn't work. Globe and Mail
  • Bushwhacking is also a term for using a machete to hack through thick jungle grass or undergrowth, which is used more to scare off animals near you than to carve a path.
  • Wearing garlic around your neck won't scare off evil . That's just an old wives tale.
  • There he and Lolo kept turtles, a monkey and even a baby crocodile — once deployed by the young Berry to scare off some local boys who were causing trouble.
  • In the U.S., food irradiation is used for various products, including ground beef, but most retailers resist the practice, lest the word irradiated'' on the label scare off customers. When Precaution Trumps Public Safety
  • The sailfish uses it for defense, raising it to scare off possible predators.
  • He tended to scare off little kids with his tallness, burliness and rareness to smile, but inside he was a nice man.
  • As the story goes, people would make noise to scare off the dog and rescue the sun, said Bill Yeung, president of the Hong Kong Astronomical Society.
  • Their notable finds included a deep-sea shark that swells its size by filling its stomach with water to scare off other predators, and a starfish that eats only driftwood.
  • They are used to scare off rather than kill the unwanted birds. Times, Sunday Times
  • It has sharp spines over its body to scare off predators and can change colour to match its surroundings. The Sun
  • But too much bawdiness could also scare off advertisers.
  • Because it might scare off the two mining companies you have bidding for all that taconite. Heaven’s Fury
  • However, I did manage to scare off their handler who would only say he had phone issues.
  • The new Democratic Party is not likely to scare off voters.
  • Firecrackers are lit to scare off evil spirits.
  • The Tories were so keen to push ahead with the float that they failed to order a full inventory of the company's assets, fearing this would scare off investors.
  • In the U.S., food irradiation is used for various products, including ground beef, but most retailers resist the practice, lest the word irradiated'' on the label scare off customers. When Precaution Trumps Public Safety
  • The rodent raised its paws and opened its mouth hoping to scare off the predator. The Sun
  • The working theory is that tourists scare off the predatory skuas.
  • Jayson drew his swallow and jumped off his stead as Virgo let out a bellow as he tried to scare off the attackers.
  • It has sharp spines over its body to scare off predators and can change colour to match its surroundings. The Sun
  • The place across the street was hit, next door was hit, another neighbor has a full time watchman and my only other neighbor is a B & B and there are always enough people there to scare off the burglars. jerezano Crime in Ajijic
  • The bombardier beetle's name might scare off predators if they knew it.
  • I have been told they wanted a 'frightener' to scare off any potential thieves. The Sun
  • Freeman's crazy antics didn't scare off potential patients, though: John F. Kennedy's sister Rosemary got a lobotomy from Freeman, which left her a vegetable for the rest of her life.
  • Hanuman langurs are trained in New Delhi to scare off aggressive rhesus monkeys and other wild animals that might roam into public spaces and cause mischief.
  • In certain areas of the tropics where clownfish, sea anemone, and butterfly fish exist, clownfish scare off butterflyfish from their host anemone.
  • For many people, external lighting seldom goes beyond a security light beaming down on the front garden to scare off intruders.
  • If you make a noise, you'll scare off the animals.

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