: to press (the strings of a stringed instrument) against the frets
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Fret and Eating
Fret not about being unfamiliar with the history of the verb fret; we’ve got something for you to chew on. While fretting today usually involves a concern that is figuratively eating at someone, fret has older senses that apply to literal eating. Fret comes from the Old English verb fretan, “to devour,” which shares an ancestor with another verb, etan, the ancestor of eat. In centuries past, animals—or monsters, in the case of Grendel—were said to fret, as were substances that corrode, or eat away, at other substances. But it wasn’t long before fret was also applied to emotional experiences, as when someone frets over an all-consuming thought or trouble. While fret still carries the meanings of “to corrode,” “to fray,” and “to chafe,” among others, one is most likely to encounter its more angsty sense of “to worry or be concerned.”
Verb (1)
over the span of thousands of years, the annual spring runoff fretted the rock, forming a deep channel
don't let the girth fret the horse's belly or you won't be able to ride him
don't fret over whether it will be sunny tomorrow, as there's nothing we can do about it
the stiff, starchy collar was fretting my neck, and I couldn't wait to change out of that costume Noun (1)
one of my customers always gets into a fret if I'm so much as 15 minutes late delivering his newspaper
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Verb
In Illinois, there is no fretting over electability.—Laura Washington, Chicago Tribune, 11 Mar. 2026 Parents shouldn’t fret, though, if their 15-month-old has yet to cut their first baby tooth.—Sarah Lindenfeld Hall, Popular Science, 11 Mar. 2026
Noun
While labor unions and others in Hollywood fret over AI, Linklater believes that the tech’s best use is in the hands of indie filmmakers.—Anthony D'alessandro, Deadline, 12 Mar. 2026 The chairman and other allies on the bank board fret that lowering rates too fast could reignite inflation.—Dave Goldiner, New York Daily News, 21 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for fret
Word History
Etymology
Verb (1) and Noun (1)
Middle English, to devour, fret, from Old English fretan to devour; akin to Old High German frezzan to devour, ezzan to eat — more at eat
Verb (2)
Middle English, back-formation from fret, fretted adorned, interwoven, from Anglo-French fretté, past participle of fretter to tie, probably from Vulgar Latin *firmitare, from Latin firmus firm
Noun (3)
perhaps from Middle French frete ferrule, from freter