trepidate

To cause to experience trepidation.

Verb

  1. To cause to experience trepidation.
    • […] “A little trepidated, if not consternated, they lifted him from his close confinement and put him to bed.” - 1878, a Memphis newspaper, quoted in 2015, John H. Ellis, Yellow Fever and Public Health in the New South,...
    • If so, he was now deeply trepidated. He had almost hoped she would not live up to expectations. She might have lost her looks, acquired irritating habits, even proved to be unpleasant. But here she was, still beautiful...
  2. To experience trepidation.
    • It sounded rather appalling to be engaged in a glee for three voices, with two performers such as these; and I trepidated a little as I went up stairs, having previously understood that the great man was already come. -...
    • I trepidated that evening upon entering their apartment; his wife, we were told, was from that other world, and no one briefed us as to how she would show. - 2007, Jack Womack, Elvissey: A Novel, Grove/Atlantic, Inc.,...

Origin

Either back-formed from, or otherwise related to, trepidation.

Forms

trepidates trepidating trepidated

Derived

trepidatious