How to Use boogeyman in a Sentence
boogeyman
noun-
This is a show about an African American woman who’s taking on maybe the biggest boogeyman of all time, which is very applicable to our election.
— Emily Longeretta, Variety, 1 Oct. 2024 -
Bale’s Gorr is a killer boogeyman blending the campy and the creepy.
— Zack Sharf, Variety, 23 June 2022 -
The district’s been the boogeyman in the first two seasons.
— Brande Victorian, The Hollywood Reporter, 7 Feb. 2024 -
Enough with the boogeyman and the tin-foil-hat, science-denying.
— BostonGlobe.com, 17 July 2021 -
So don’t get your hopes up about any creepy boogeymen here.
— Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post, 4 Apr. 2023 -
It’s now all one mega-boogeyman that must be erased, canceled, cut off from the world.
— Andy Meek, BGR, 7 Mar. 2022 -
Vecna is the boogeyman that resides in the Creel House attic.
— Nick Romano, EW.com, 18 Apr. 2022 -
Is there a boogeyman that hangs out in your bedroom closet?
— Wayne and Wanda, Anchorage Daily News, 14 Aug. 2022 -
Or what about Zone 3 (which seems to have become the boogeyman of running efforts)?
— Jason Fitzgerald, Outside Online, 4 Apr. 2023 -
More broadly Soros is a common boogeyman figure for those on the right.
— Emily Stewart, Vox, 9 Oct. 2018 -
This boogeyman bleeds, Rita notes, and therefore it can be hurt.
— Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post, 30 May 2023 -
Cars themselves are becoming a boogeyman for some on the left.
— Dominic Pino, National Review, 3 Mar. 2022 -
The fascination with this genre is seen in motifs like El Cucuy, a boogeyman, and the shapeshifter Nagual.
— Sarah Quiñones Wolfson, Los Angeles Times, 16 Oct. 2023 -
Now that those Sunnis are pretty firmly in the U.S. corner, there’s less reason to cite the boogeyman in Tehran.
— Noah Shachtman, WIRED, 3 Jan. 2008 -
Blasting alien boogeymen with space guns has always been good fun.
— Valentina Palladino and Jeff Dunn, Ars Technica, 7 Feb. 2020 -
And new research shows that fake information may be more of a boogeyman than a true threat.
— Kevin T. Dugan, Fortune, 8 Sep. 2021 -
Besides, the prospect of President Michael R. Pence is not exactly a boogeyman those on the right should fear.
— Chris Stirewalt, Fox News, 24 Aug. 2018 -
But for Ryan, like most in his party, the deficit was a convenient boogeyman, only to be set loose when the GOP was out of power.
— Alex Shephard, The New Republic, 12 Apr. 2018 -
In the region of southern Chhattisgarh known as Bastar, the boogeyman has been the Christian.
— Shams Irfan, Washington Post, 1 Feb. 2023 -
Amid the relentless stock declines, some blamed a different boogeyman: Investors who bet on a fall in the price of a stock.
— Matthew Goldstein, New York Times, 4 May 2023 -
Like Michael Myers’ constant stalk of Laurie Strode, the boogeyman is always still out there.
— Jude Clemente, Forbes, 22 May 2022 -
The boogeyman is real sometimes: Forget the monster under the bed.
— National Geographic, 26 Mar. 2019 -
People are so afraid of the auction houses, the boogeyman or whatever.
— New York Times, 14 June 2021 -
The March 2020 settlement has become a boogeyman to Trump and his Georgia allies.
— Daniel Dale, CNN, 8 Dec. 2021 -
It’s too easy for politicians looking for a boogeyman to think of reporters as the shrill pundits arguing on TV.
— Petula Dvorak, Washington Post, 28 June 2018 -
The group gathered around the town square, waiting for the arrival of what has become a new American boogeyman: antifa.
— Star Tribune, 23 Sep. 2020 -
Friday the 13th is, at its core, the story of fallout from a lost child, as well as the story of the kind of magical thinking that turns that child into a boogeyman by the end of the film.
— Matthew Jackson, Vulture, 21 Apr. 2023 -
But even with Graham’s heroics, this was only the equivalent of pushing the boogeyman back into the closet with the door still open.
— Jesse Newell, kansascity, 7 Jan. 2018 -
Republicans plan to use Sanders and socialism as a foil and a boogeyman in fundraising.
— Nihal Krishan, Washington Examiner, 4 Mar. 2020 -
Among the supposedly overblown threats Mueller identifies are the boogeymen of China, Iran, and Russia.
— Tanisha M. Fazal, Foreign Affairs, 24 Aug. 2021
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'boogeyman.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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