No. Fraught means "loaded" or "heavy." We say something is fraught with meaning when it has many implications.
Yes, 'the meaning was fraught' is correct. It means that the meaning was filled with tension, anxiety, or difficulty.
Yes. If you say - I am fraught. Then fraught has the meaning of 'feeling worry or anxiety'. Often fraught is used this way - fraught with danger / fraught with problems. eg Their marriage has been fraught with difficulties.
The upcoming negotiations are fraught with tension and uncertainty as both sides struggle to find common ground.
Yes, "regardless of if" is correct grammatically, but it can be simplified to just "regardless of" without losing its meaning.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "you peed your pants" as it is a verb (peeing) followed by a possessive pronoun (your) and a noun (pants).
Both "spoke about" and "spoke of" are grammatically correct. However, "spoke about" is more commonly used in contemporary English.
Yes. If you say - I am fraught. Then fraught has the meaning of 'feeling worry or anxiety'. Often fraught is used this way - fraught with danger / fraught with problems. eg Their marriage has been fraught with difficulties.
The dating scene is fraught with peril these days. In this case it is an adjective meaning accompanied by, in this case, danger.
Both "spoke about" and "spoke of" are grammatically correct. However, "spoke about" is more commonly used in contemporary English.
I was fraught with worry.
caught rhymes with fraught
it means to be accompanied by------------------full of (as in - fraught with danger)orcausing distress (as in - a fraught mother-daughter relationship)
The upcoming negotiations are fraught with tension and uncertainty as both sides struggle to find common ground.
que?
It is correct to say that Premnath Malhotra was an Indian actor.
The sentence appears to have no meaning. So I would say it is not correct.
The road to Boston is fraught with danger, these days.
The ocean voyage was fraught with danger.