The sea is fraught with danger today!
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.
No. Fraught means "loaded" or "heavy." We say something is fraught with meaning when it has many implications.
The pirate committed the treacherous crime of stealing the captain's treasure.
The word fraught can be a noun or a verb. However, this term is no longer used in present day English.
Fraught: early 14c., "laden" (of vessels), past participle of Middle English: fraughten "to load (a ship) with cargo," from fraght "cargo, lading of a ship" (early 13c.), variant of freight; influenced by Middle Dutch vrachten "to load or furnish with cargo," from Proto Germanic. *fra-aihtiz. Figurative sense is first attested 1570s.
I was fraught with worry.
The ocean voyage was fraught with danger.
Life on the sea is fraught with danger.
Her new assignment was fraught with danger.
The road to Boston is fraught with danger, these days.
The new policy is fraught with problems and loop holes. The new principal will take charge of a student body fraught with behavior problems and internal conflicts.
The dating scene is fraught with peril these days. In this case it is an adjective meaning accompanied by, in this case, danger.
The wharves of the port at San Francisco are fraught with crime.
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.
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)
No. Fraught means "loaded" or "heavy." We say something is fraught with meaning when it has many implications.