φοβερό
Wordform Details
Translation: terriblefrightfuldreadful
Part of Speech: adjective
Inflection Type:
masculinesingularaccusativeIs Dictionary Form: No
Dictionary Form Details
Lemma: φοβερός
Translation: terrible; awesome; frightening; formidable; great; amazing; terrific (adjective)
Etymology: From Ancient Greek φοβερός (phoberós, 'fearful, frightening'), derived from φόβος (phóbos, 'fear, terror, panic'). The root φόβος is the origin of English words like 'phobia' and 'hydrophobia'. Interestingly, in modern Greek, φοβερός has undergone semantic broadening to also mean 'awesome' or 'amazing' in a positive sense, similar to how 'terrific' evolved in English from meaning 'causing terror' to 'excellent'.
Example Usage
Το φαγητό ήταν φοβερό!
The food was awesome!
Είναι φοβερός παίκτης.
He's a tremendous player.
Είδα μια φοβερή ταινία χθες το βράδυ.
I saw an awesome movie last night.
Έχει φοβερές ικανότητες στα μαθηματικά.
He has amazing abilities in mathematics.
Ακούστηκε ένας φοβερός θόρυβος από το υπόγειο.
A terrible noise was heard from the basement.
Ο καιρός είναι φοβερός σήμερα, καλύτερα να μείνουμε σπίτι.
The weather is terrible today, we'd better stay home.
Φοβερό! Κέρδισες το διαγωνισμό!
Awesome! You won the competition!
Mnemonics
- Think of 'phobia' (fear) to remember the original meaning 'frightening'
- Remember that 'terrific' in English also evolved from meaning 'terrifying' to 'excellent', just like φοβερός
- The 'φοβ' (phob) root connects to fear, while the ending '-ερός' indicates something that causes or produces that quality
Synonyms
Antonyms
Cultural Context
In modern Greek culture, φοβερός is frequently used as a positive exclamation, similar to 'awesome' in English. This positive meaning is particularly common among younger speakers. The word can express both extreme fear and extreme admiration depending on context, making it a versatile term in everyday speech.
Easily Confused With
Explanation: While φοβερός means 'frightening' or 'awesome', φοβητσιάρης means 'cowardly' or 'fearful' (describing someone who feels fear, not causes it).
Confused word:
Είναι πολύ φοβητσιάρης, φοβάται το σκοτάδι.
He is very fearful, he's afraid of the dark.
Notes: The distinction is between causing fear (φοβερός) and experiencing fear (φοβητσιάρης).
Mnemonic: φοβερός causes fear in others; φοβητσιάρης experiences fear himself.
Explanation: φοβερός means 'frightening/awesome' while φοβισμένος means 'frightened/scared'.
Confused word:
Το παιδί είναι φοβισμένο.
The child is frightened.
Notes: φοβισμένος is the passive participle of the verb φοβάμαι (to be afraid).
Mnemonic: φοβερός ends with -ρός (active quality) while φοβισμένος ends with -μένος (passive state).