freaker

freaker

1. n. an incident that causes someone to freak (out). (Collegiate.) Wasn’t that weird? A real freaker.
2. n. a freaked (out) person. (Collegiate.) Some poor freaker sat in the corner and rocked.
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • freak out, to
  • freak someone out
  • freaked
  • freaked out
  • freaking
  • phreak
  • freak out
  • squig out
  • creeper
  • freak out at (one)
References in periodicals archive
I make the mistake of throwing a Molotov cocktail at a freaker nest, and now two dozen angry freakers are running right at me.
Prizes were donated by Cucalorus Film Festival, TAYHAM, Freaker, Alternative Apparel, Half United, and Friends of NHCPL.
Freaker Feet NFL socks in Drew Brees and Eli Manning $19.95 each; Pine Cone, 5056 I-55 N.
The featured magazines include: Blow, Cereal, Concrete Wave, Delayed Gratification, Disegno, HOLO, IdN, Katachi, Lionheart, Little White Lies, PAPER, Sneaker Freaker, Things & Ink, 3x3, Very Nearly Almost (VNA) and Wax Poetics.
Test Match Special pundit John Arlott was clearly confused and called the pitch invader a freaker, according to the report.
He said: "We have got a freaker down the wicket now.
Sneaker collecting is a huge hobby worldwide, with its own e-zines, such as Sneaker Freaker Magazine, and trade shows: New York City hosts the quarterly Sneaker Con.
Fissell, "Hairy Women and Naked Truths: Gender and the Politics of Knowledge in Aristotle's Masterpiece," William and Mary Quarterly 60:1 (January 2003): 43-75; Lorraine Daston and Katharine Park, Wonders'and the Order of Nature, 1150-1750 (New York, 2001); Rosemarie Garland Thomson, ed., Freaker; Cultural Spectacles of the Extraordinary Body (New York, 1996).
who wants to say "freightage," what's the charge for that word who wants to say "distress" and wear the black chiffon scarf inside it who wants to write in old long lines clearly and not be slightly more inscrutable askance in freaker lines, in brilliance
For instance, if you collect sneakers, you'll find "sole" mates at Sneaker Freaker (www.sneakerfreaker com), the online home of a print publication that claims it is "the first and only international sneaker magazine to document the modern footwear craze as a global phenomenon."
Larry, the guy who does this, is a San Diego area freaker with an eye for the offbeat and interesting; this issue even comes with a 3D cover and glasses.
And Test Match Special doyen John Arlott, who couldn't remember the right word, described him as a "freaker" - and added dryly: "Masculine.
Freaker USA, Michael Barr, President & COO, 910-399-3988, michael@freakerusa.com, P.
The zombies - sorry, 'freakers' - are cleverly and lovingly designed, with different enemy types distinguished in intricate ways that go far beyond the standard big and slow/small and fast dichotomy.
Survivors live in a world where resources are scarce, violence and murder are common and Freakers roam the wilderness.