Usually means: Worry or be anxious about.
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We found 48 dictionaries that define the word fret:

General (28 matching dictionaries)
  1. fret: Merriam-Webster.com
  2. fret, fret, fret, fret: Oxford Learner's Dictionaries
  3. fret, fret, fret: American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
  4. fret: Collins English Dictionary
  5. fret: Vocabulary.com
  6. Fret, fret: Wordnik
  7. fret: Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
  8. Fret, Fret, Fret: InfoVisual Visual Dictionary
  9. FRET, fret: Wiktionary
  10. fret: Webster's New World College Dictionary, 4th Ed.
  11. fret: The Wordsmyth English Dictionary-Thesaurus
  12. fret: Infoplease Dictionary
  13. Fret, fret: Dictionary.com
  14. fret (n.), fret (v.): Online Etymology Dictionary
  15. fret: Cambridge Essential American English Dictionary
  16. FRET (magazine), FRET, Fret (disambiguation), Fret: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
  17. Fret: Online Plain Text English Dictionary
  18. fret: Webster's Revised Unabridged, 1913 Edition
  19. fret: Rhymezone
  20. fret: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary
  21. fret: Webster's 1828 Dictionary
  22. fret: Stammtisch Beau Fleuve Acronyms
  23. fret: Free Dictionary
  24. fret: Mnemonic Dictionary
  25. fret: LookWAYup Translating Dictionary/Thesaurus
  26. fret: Dictionary/thesaurus

Art (4 matching dictionaries)
  1. fret: ArtLex Lexicon of Visual Art Terminology
  2. An Illustrated Dictionary of Jewelry (No longer online)
  3. Shakespeare Glossary (No longer online)
  4. Virginia Tech Multimedia Music Dictionary (No longer online)

Business (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. Construction Term Glossary (No longer online)
  2. fret: Legal dictionary

Computing (1 matching dictionary)
  1. fret: Encyclopedia

Medicine (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. online medical dictionary (No longer online)
  2. fret: Medical dictionary

Miscellaneous (3 matching dictionaries)
  1. FRET: Acronym Finder
  2. AbbreviationZ (No longer online)
  3. fret: Idioms

Religion (1 matching dictionary)
  1. FRET: Glossary of Biblical English of the Authorised Version of the HOLY BIBLE

Slang (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. fret: Green’s Dictionary of Slang
  2. fret: Urban Dictionary

Tech (5 matching dictionaries)
  1. Book Binding (No longer online)
  2. Lake and Water Word Glossary (No longer online)
  3. SeaTalk Dictionary of English Nautical Language (No longer online)
  4. Sweetwater Music (No longer online)
  5. Urban Conservation Glossary (No longer online)

(Note: See fretless as well.)

Definitions from Wiktionary (
)
American English Definition British English Definition
verb:  (transitive, obsolete or poetic) Especially when describing animals: to consume, devour, or eat.
verb:  (transitive) To chafe or irritate; to worry.
verb:  (transitive) To make rough, to agitate or disturb; to cause to ripple.
verb:  (transitive) In the form fret out: to squander, to waste.
verb:  (transitive, intransitive) To gnaw; to consume, to eat away.
verb:  (transitive, intransitive) To be chafed or irritated; to be angry or vexed; to utter peevish expressions through irritation or worry.
verb:  (intransitive) To be worn away; to chafe; to fray.
verb:  (intransitive) To be anxious, to worry.
verb:  (intransitive) To be agitated; to rankle; to be in violent commotion.
verb:  (intransitive, brewing, oenology) To have secondary fermentation (fermentation occurring after the conversion of sugar to alcohol in beers and wine) take place.
noun:  Agitation of the surface of a fluid by fermentation or some other cause; a rippling on the surface of water.
noun:  Agitation of the mind marked by complaint and impatience; disturbance of temper; irritation.
noun:  Herpes; tetter (“any of various pustular skin conditions”).
noun:  (mining, in the plural) The worn sides of riverbanks, where ores or stones containing them accumulate after being washed down from higher ground, which thus indicate to miners the locality of veins of ore.
noun:  An ornamental pattern consisting of repeated vertical and horizontal lines, often in relief.
noun:  (heraldry) A saltire interlaced with a mascle.
verb:  (transitive) To decorate or ornament, especially with an interlaced or interwoven pattern, or (architecture) with carving or relief (raised) work.
verb:  (transitive) To form a pattern on; to variegate.
verb:  (transitive) To cut through with a fretsaw, to create fretwork.
noun:  (obsolete or dialectal) A ferrule, a ring.
noun:  (music) One of the pieces of metal, plastic or wood across the neck of a guitar or other string instrument that marks where a finger should be positioned to depress a string as it is played.
verb:  To bind, to tie, originally with a loop or ring.
verb:  (transitive, music) Musical senses.
verb:  To fit frets on to (a musical instrument).
verb:  To press down the string behind a fret.
noun:  A channel, a strait; a fretum.
noun:  (rare) A channel or passage created by the sea.
noun:  (Northumbria) A fog or mist at sea, or coming inland from the sea.
noun:  (physics) Förster resonance energy transfer
noun:  (physics) fluorescence resonance energy transfer, which is a type of the Förster phenomenon where one or both of the partners in the energy transfer are fluorescent chromophores

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