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creep

Intransitive VerbTransitive Verb[C/U] Both
pl: creepspast: creptpp: crepting: creepingcomp: more creepysup: most creepy

The word carries a heavy sense of stealth and discomfort. When used as a movement, it suggests a predatory or secretive quality, evoking a feeling of tension or fear. It is not just slow movement, but movement designed to hide from view. As a noun, it describes a specific type of social repulsion. It refers to someone who violates personal boundaries or makes others feel unsafe through unwanted attention. This usage is highly informal and strongly negative, focusing on the visceral feeling of skin-crawling disgust.

Countable when referring to a weird person (a creep). Uncountable when referring to the slow movement of a substance (the creep of the glacier).

Meanings

Intransitive Verb
[someone]

To move slowly and quietly to avoid being noticed.

"He tried to creep past the sleeping dog."

Transitive Verb
[something]

To grow or spread gradually across a surface.

"The ivy began to creep up the brick wall."

Noun
[someone]

A person who is perceived as unpleasant, weird, or socially inappropriate.

"That guy at the party was a total creep."

Related Words

Last Updated: May 31, 2026Report an Error