Hypertext Webster Gateway: "suspicious"

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) (web1913)

Suspicious \Sus*pi"cious\, a. [OE. suspecious; cf. L.
suspiciosus. See {Suspicion}.]
1. Inclined to suspect; given or prone to suspicion; apt to
imagine without proof.

Nature itself, after it has done an injury, will
ever be suspicious; and no man can love the person
he suspects. --South.

Many mischievous insects are daily at work to make
men of merit suspicious of each other. --Pope.

2. Indicating suspicion, mistrust, or fear.

We have a suspicious, fearful, constrained
countenance. --Swift.

3. Liable to suspicion; adapted to raise suspicion; giving
reason to imagine ill; questionable; as, an author of
suspicious innovations; suspicious circumstances.

I spy a black, suspicious, threatening could.
--Shak.

Syn: Jealous; distrustful; mistrustful; doubtful;
questionable. See {Jealous}. -- {Sus*pi"cious*ly}, adv.
-- {Sus*pi"cious*ness}, n.

From WordNet (r) 1.7 (wn)

suspicious
adj 1: openly distrustful and unwilling to confide [syn: {leery}, {mistrustful},
{untrusting}, {wary}]
2: (informal) not as expected; "there was something fishy about
the accident"; "up to some funny business"; "some
definitely queer goings-on"; "a shady deal"; "her motives
were suspect"; "suspicious behavior" [syn: {fishy}, {funny},
{queer}, {shady}, {suspect}]


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