twinge
English
Etymology
From Old English twengan.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /twɪndʒ/
Noun
twinge (plural twinges)
- A pinch; a tweak; a twitch.
- A sudden sharp pain.
- I got a twinge in my arm.
- 1935, Francis Beeding, “7/2”, in The Norwich Victims:
- The two Gordon setters came obediently to heel. Sir Oswald Feiling winced as he turned to go home. He had felt a warning twinge of lumbago.
Translations
sudden sharp pain
Verb
twinge (third-person singular simple present twinges, present participle twingeing or twinging, simple past and past participle twinged)
- (transitive) To pull with a twitch; to pinch; to tweak.
- Hudibras
- When a man is past his sense, / There's no way to reduce him thence, / But twinging him by the ears or nose, / Or laying on of heavy blows.
- Hudibras
- (transitive) To affect with a sharp, sudden pain; to torment with pinching or sharp pains.
- L'Estrange
- The gnat […] twinged him [the lion] till he made him tear himself, and so mastered him.
- L'Estrange
- (intransitive) To have a sudden, sharp, local pain, like a twitch; to suffer a keen, darting, or shooting pain.
- My side twinges.
Translations
Anagrams
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.