twinge
suomi-englanti sanakirjatwinge englannista suomeksi
pistää, vihloa
pistos
vihlaista
puristaa
twinge englanniksi
To have a sudden, pinching or sharp pain in a specific part of the body, like a twitch.
(ux)
(RQ:Kingsley Miscellanies)
To pull and twist (someone or something); to pinch, to tweak, to twitch, to wring.
(RQ:Beaumont Fletcher Woman Hater)
(RQ:Beaumont Fletcher King)
(RQ:Jonson New Inne)
(RQ:Stanley History of Philosophy)|subsection=2nd part of philosophy (Physick, or, Of Nature)|chapter=XV|chaptername=Qualities from Atoms, Considered according to Their Properties, Taken together|page=163|passage=Entring into the pores of the ſkin, it (quote-gloss) keeps back and drives in again the little bodies of heat, by oppoſing the bodies of cold, and vvith its little ſharp corners, it tears and tvvingeth all things vvhereſoever it paſſes.
(RQ:Butler Hudibras)
(quote-book)|series=Clarendon Press Series|location=Oxford, Oxfordshire|publisher=University Press|Clarendon Press|page=399|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Xm1LAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA399|oclc=4740318|passage=Thou twingest therewith as doth a (pair of) tongs.|footer=(small)'' (written before 1250).
To affect or torment (someone, their mind, or part of their body) with one or more sudden, pinching or sharp pains; to irritate.
(quote-book); (w)&93;|title=The Art of Chirurgery, Explained in Six Parts ... being the Whol Fifth Book of Practical Physick|location=London|publisher=(...) Peter Cole and Edward Cole,(nb...)|section=book V (Of the External Diseases), part IV (Of Wounds)|page=2676|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/b30340378/page/n345/mode/1up|column=1|oclc=78284351|passage=For the Chiefeſt cauſe of pain in VVounds of the nerves is the excrementitious matter ſhut up; vvhich being overlong detayned getteth to it ſelf a depraved quality, pulleth and tvvingeth the Nerves, and at length putrifieth.
(RQ:L'Estrange Fables of Aesop)
(RQ:John Gay Fables)
To prick or stimulate (one's conscience).
(RQ:Bunyan Grace Abounding)
(RQ:Edgeworth Popular Tales)
(RQ:Scott Paul's Letters) Buonaparte, has found his conscience alarmingly twinged by so ominous a declaration on the part of a Calvinistic monarch, and has already made his remonstrance against this part of the proposed constitution in a pastoral letter, which is couched in a very determined language.
A sudden, pinching or sharp pain in a specific part of the body, especially one lasting for a short time.
(cot)
(RQ:Middleton Mad World). You feele as it vvere a tvvinge my Lord? / ''Folly-vv'' (quote-gloss). I, ee'n a tvvinge, you ſay right. / ''Sir Boun''. A pox diſcouer e'm, that tvvinge I feele too.
(RQ:Eliot Romola) gave him such severe twinges that it was plain enough how intolerable it would be if he were not well supplied with rings of rare virtue, and with an amulet worn close under the right breast.
(quote-book)
(RQ:J. G. Holland Gilbert)
A sudden, sharp feeling of an emotional or mental nature, as of guilt or sadness; a pang, a paroxysm, a throe; also, a prick of the conscience.
(collocation)
(RQ:Dryden Spanish Fryar)
(RQ:Cowper Poems)
(RQ:Hughes Tom Brown at Oxford)
A sudden, sharp occurrence of something; a nip.
(synonym of).
(RQ:Erasmus Newe Testamente)
(RQ:Beaumont Fletcher Comedies and Tragedies)
(RQ:Robert Browning Ring and Book)