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  1. Dictionary
    Spook
    /spo͞ok/

    noun

    • 1. a ghost. informal
    • 2. a spy: informal North American "a CIA spook"

    verb

    • 1. frighten; unnerve: informal "they spooked a couple of grizzly bears"
  2. The meaning of SPOOK is ghost, specter. How to use spook in a sentence.

  3. SPOOK definition: 1. informal for ghost: 2. a spy 3. to frighten a person or animal: . Learn more.

  4. noun. Informal. a ghost; specter. Slang. a ghostwriter. Slang. an eccentric person. Slang: Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a Black person. Slang. an espionage agent; spy.

  5. SPOOK meaning: 1. informal for ghost: 2. a spy 3. to frighten a person or animal: . Learn more.

  6. noun. someone unpleasantly strange or eccentric. synonyms: creep, weirdie, weirdo, weirdy. see more. verb. frighten or scare, and often provoke into a violent action. “The noise spooked the horse”. see more.

  7. Define spook. spook synonyms, spook pronunciation, spook translation, English dictionary definition of spook. n. 1. Informal A ghost; a specter. 2. Slang A secret agent; a spy. 3. Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for a black person. v. spooked , spook·ing...

  8. 1. countable noun. A spook is a ghost. [informal] 2. countable noun. A spook is a spy. [US, informal] ...a U.S. intelligence spook. Synonyms: spy, secret agent, double agent, secret service agent More Synonyms of spook. 3. transitive verb. If people are spooked, something has scared them or made them nervous. [mainly US]

  9. Jun 2, 2024 · spook (third-person singular simple present spooks, present participle spooking, simple past and past participle spooked) ( transitive ) To frighten or make nervous (especially by startling). The hunters were spooked when the black cat crossed their path.

  10. 1. countable noun. A spook is a ghost. [informal] 2. countable noun. A spook is a spy. [US, informal] ...as a U.S. intelligence spook said yesterday. Synonyms: spy, secret agent, double agent, secret service agent More Synonyms of spook. 3. verb. If people are spooked, something has scared them or made them nervous. [mainly US]

  11. When referring to a black person, the term spook dates back to the 1940s. It is used with disparaging intent and is perceived as highly insulting. Black pilots who trained at Tuskegee Institute during World War II were called the Spookwaffe.

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