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[ US /ˈspuki/ ]
[ UK /spˈuːki/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. unpredictably excitable (especially of horses)

How To Use spooky In A Sentence

  • Which neatly brings us to Humans, a new spooky drama about artificial intelligence. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is a slow-boiler of a film, an exercise in the suspense that spooky children, locked doors, creaking floors, mist, candles and shifty characters do best.
  • However, now that the digest is finished (until next month), Spooky's is making me go Outside today to see my neurologist, because the seizure was that bad. "We think we've climbed so high, Up all the backs we've condemned..."
  • Generally, though, this is mainstream music with a spooky gown hastily thrown over it. Times, Sunday Times
  • If anyone's interested in gifting Spooky and me with the distractions that help to make this existence bearable, in the form of Solstice gifts, we have both updated our Amazon wish lists. "I'm living in an age that calls darkness light..."
  • The next note seems to suggest he was initially thinking of this as something quite spooky. The Sun
  • Halloween is a spooky and scary night . People dress up in the Hallween.
  • Jigsaw has locked a bunch of strangers in a spooky old house with nerve gas slowly killing them off.
  • He believes that by scaring a horse, such as sacking them out incorrectly, snubbing, or tying a scary object to the saddle to where the horse has no means of escape will lead to a nervous or spooky horse.
  • Really, Holmes, I would swear there is something spooky or supernatural about cats.
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