释义 |
Definition of twinge in English: twingenounPlural twinges twɪn(d)ʒtwɪndʒ 1A sudden, sharp localized pain. 剧痛,阵痛 he felt a twinge in his knee 他膝盖感到一阵刺痛。 Example sentencesExamples - It was during Juliet rehearsals in 1955 that Rodgers felt twinges of pain in his left jaw.
- He took some time to examine the still-healing wound on her leg that still gave her twinges of pain when pressed.
- His battered stomach muscles - constricted from lack of use - sent a sharp twinge of pain skittering across his abdomen.
- Then as I began to relax and almost enjoy myself, the twinges and pains started.
- She takes a fiber supplement when she feels the early twinges of abdominal pain.
- A sharp twinge of pain caused him to take in a hissing breath in an effort to resist temptation of crying out as she found the spot.
- While he was thinking of a way to entertain himself, he suddenly felt a small twinge of pain in his head.
- By midday the pains had gone from sharp twinges every 5 minutes or so to a constant, agonising pain (Which the Dr at the hospital told me were contractions as my cervix had to open up).
- Shortly after the three of us set upon his dorm room to dismantle it, a small but sharp twinge of pain registered just under my left kneecap.
- She wriggled off the windowsill and scrambled onto the stone wall, ignoring the twinges of pain in her damaged wrist.
- Lee laughed aloud, and then held his side, as the laughter caused his side to flare in a sharp twinge of pain.
- Halfway through the day I turned my head and felt a sudden twinge of pain.
- But as she discovered a lot of the aching and twinges of sharp pain had gone, giving her some relief as she moved and walked.
- A sharp twinge of agony shot up her left arm, reaching her shoulder and spreading through her entire chest.
- He was extremely gentle with her, and she felt only the smallest twinges of pain as he carried her up the grand stairs towards her rooms.
- For example, if someone is suffering from arthritis in the knees, they will feel a sharp twinge, rather like a needle, when the machine sends a charge to the corresponding point on their ear.
- I lay there with slight twinges of pain racing up and down my ribs, neck, face and realized that the house was completely silent.
- The side of my face gave a sharp twinge of pain, but I pushed that aside.
- The sharp twinge of pain combined with suddenly rising to his feet must have induced a vasovagal attack.
- Then at 65m, far out in front of the field, a sudden twinge tickles his thigh.
Synonyms pain, sharp pain, shooting pain, stab of pain, spasm, ache, throb cramp, stitch archaic throe - 1.1 A brief experience of an emotion, typically an unpleasant one.
痛苦,内疚 Kate felt a twinge of guilt 凯特有种负罪感。 Example sentencesExamples - I snapped my attention back to my friends and felt a twinge of annoyance after hearing Drew's speech.
- Then we began hugging everyone in sight but still we all were feeling a twinge of sadness being unable to hug all our friends and family back home.
- I'm sure of only one thing: that I don't trust anyone - pro or con - who doesn't feel a twinge of doubt about his or her responses.
- Lauren smiled at her friend and felt a twinge of jealousy at the same time.
- The plane stopped off in Thailand, when I suddenly became overwhelmed with a wave of curiosity and maybe just a twinge of compassion.
- The first time I read this, I felt a twinge of panic.
- I felt a twinge of anxiety when I first moved to Manhattan.
- They have made even the hardest-hearted of us feel a twinge of pity where few of us expected to find one.
- I felt a twinge of jealousy and anger, I rarely got jealous over things mostly because half the time I didn't care.
- McConnell could be forgiven for feeling a twinge of envy.
- A twinge of disappointment colored her happiness as she remembered her parents wouldn't be sharing in that wonderful moment.
- Rebecca experienced a brief twinge of embarrassment as she wondered just what her children had seen if anything.
- If you are now experiencing a twinge of embarrassment, it is probably because of a costly error of judgement in relating to somebody from the opposite sex.
- As Gretchen elaborated, Ikiri felt a surge of anger, jealousy, and a twinge of loss.
- The thought brought fear and a twinge of panic as Christopher scrubbed at his scalp.
- Naturally, I'll experience a twinge of envy as employed friends brag about their party excesses.
- I look forward to her future with uncertainty, I look to her past with a twinge of nostalgia.
- No matter how much we all like to pretend we've grown out of Christmas, there is still a twinge of excitement associated with the unwrapping of any present.
- Still not experiencing a twinge of fear, she eyed the man up and down.
- She felt a twinge of jealousy wondering if he was the same way with Mia and she couldn't help but long for a man like Blake.
Synonyms pang, prick, dart qualm, scruple, misgiving
verbtwinges, twinging, twinged, twingeing twɪn(d)ʒtwɪndʒ [no object](of a part of the body) suffer a sudden, sharp localized pain. (身体某部分)剧痛,阵痛 stop the exercises if the tummy twinges 感到肚子疼就停止锻炼。 Example sentencesExamples - His entire body ached, with the remnants of aches all over, twinging his musculature here and there.
- He picked his bruised body gingerly off the floor, cursing as his abused hands twinged with pain.
- As soon as his right leg hit the ground, his knee twinged with pain.
- Her father had died almost seven years ago now and her heart still twinged whenever the door opened and he wasn't there to greet her.
- Every nerve was twinging with resolve to end it.
- The way he said Aiden twinged a nerve but I kept ignoring him.
- Deran had broken his left arm twice, himself; he hardly noticed when it twinged with bad weather.
- A nerve suddenly twinged in her chest, and without a second thought, she shot for the surface of the pool, suddenly afraid.
- He woke to a rap on the door and a flood of sunlight that caused his forehead to twinge in pain.
- If Matt's jaw hadn't been twinging from the cut, it would have dropped.
- She slung the bookbag over one shoulder, which twinged.
- She rolled over onto her back and stretched, feeling the muscles in her arms and legs twinge in pain.
- Her back twinged with pain, she didn't want to do anything right now.
- It twinged, it stabbed, and it sliced through his nerves.
- My ribs barely twinged, even at the quick change in my position.
- Leaning back in the seat of the car, Matt was happy to let Kate do all the driving; his leg was still twinging from the cut inflicted on it earlier.
- My stomach twinged in protest as I thought of the girls in the hallway, and I hoped to head off a stomachache with sleep.
- Jinx caught himself with his hands before he fell for the fourth time in ten minutes, swallowing the wince as his aching wrist twinged.
- Her heart twinged again, but she ignored it and stalked toward the window.
- His stomach twinged violently and he wretched upon the walkway.
OriginOld English twengan 'pinch, wring', of Germanic origin. The noun dates from the mid 16th century. thong from Old English: Thong is related to twinge (Old English), which originally meant to pinch. In Anglo-Saxon times a thong was a shoelace. It then came to be used for any narrow strip of leather, and finally to any thin strip of material, from which came the modern use for minuscule underwear in the 1970s.
Rhymesbinge, cringe, fringe, hinge, impinge, singe, springe, swinge, syringe, tinge, whinge Definition of twinge in US English: twingenountwɪndʒtwinj 1A sudden, sharp localized pain. 剧痛,阵痛 he felt a twinge in his knee 他膝盖感到一阵刺痛。 Example sentencesExamples - I lay there with slight twinges of pain racing up and down my ribs, neck, face and realized that the house was completely silent.
- But as she discovered a lot of the aching and twinges of sharp pain had gone, giving her some relief as she moved and walked.
- It was during Juliet rehearsals in 1955 that Rodgers felt twinges of pain in his left jaw.
- He took some time to examine the still-healing wound on her leg that still gave her twinges of pain when pressed.
- Then as I began to relax and almost enjoy myself, the twinges and pains started.
- The side of my face gave a sharp twinge of pain, but I pushed that aside.
- While he was thinking of a way to entertain himself, he suddenly felt a small twinge of pain in his head.
- Shortly after the three of us set upon his dorm room to dismantle it, a small but sharp twinge of pain registered just under my left kneecap.
- Halfway through the day I turned my head and felt a sudden twinge of pain.
- She wriggled off the windowsill and scrambled onto the stone wall, ignoring the twinges of pain in her damaged wrist.
- He was extremely gentle with her, and she felt only the smallest twinges of pain as he carried her up the grand stairs towards her rooms.
- Then at 65m, far out in front of the field, a sudden twinge tickles his thigh.
- The sharp twinge of pain combined with suddenly rising to his feet must have induced a vasovagal attack.
- For example, if someone is suffering from arthritis in the knees, they will feel a sharp twinge, rather like a needle, when the machine sends a charge to the corresponding point on their ear.
- She takes a fiber supplement when she feels the early twinges of abdominal pain.
- His battered stomach muscles - constricted from lack of use - sent a sharp twinge of pain skittering across his abdomen.
- A sharp twinge of agony shot up her left arm, reaching her shoulder and spreading through her entire chest.
- Lee laughed aloud, and then held his side, as the laughter caused his side to flare in a sharp twinge of pain.
- A sharp twinge of pain caused him to take in a hissing breath in an effort to resist temptation of crying out as she found the spot.
- By midday the pains had gone from sharp twinges every 5 minutes or so to a constant, agonising pain (Which the Dr at the hospital told me were contractions as my cervix had to open up).
Synonyms pain, sharp pain, shooting pain, stab of pain, spasm, ache, throb - 1.1 A brief experience of an emotion, typically an unpleasant one.
痛苦,内疚 Kate felt a twinge of guilt 凯特有种负罪感。 Example sentencesExamples - If you are now experiencing a twinge of embarrassment, it is probably because of a costly error of judgement in relating to somebody from the opposite sex.
- She felt a twinge of jealousy wondering if he was the same way with Mia and she couldn't help but long for a man like Blake.
- As Gretchen elaborated, Ikiri felt a surge of anger, jealousy, and a twinge of loss.
- Then we began hugging everyone in sight but still we all were feeling a twinge of sadness being unable to hug all our friends and family back home.
- I felt a twinge of jealousy and anger, I rarely got jealous over things mostly because half the time I didn't care.
- McConnell could be forgiven for feeling a twinge of envy.
- Naturally, I'll experience a twinge of envy as employed friends brag about their party excesses.
- I'm sure of only one thing: that I don't trust anyone - pro or con - who doesn't feel a twinge of doubt about his or her responses.
- I look forward to her future with uncertainty, I look to her past with a twinge of nostalgia.
- Lauren smiled at her friend and felt a twinge of jealousy at the same time.
- No matter how much we all like to pretend we've grown out of Christmas, there is still a twinge of excitement associated with the unwrapping of any present.
- A twinge of disappointment colored her happiness as she remembered her parents wouldn't be sharing in that wonderful moment.
- Still not experiencing a twinge of fear, she eyed the man up and down.
- Rebecca experienced a brief twinge of embarrassment as she wondered just what her children had seen if anything.
- The thought brought fear and a twinge of panic as Christopher scrubbed at his scalp.
- I felt a twinge of anxiety when I first moved to Manhattan.
- I snapped my attention back to my friends and felt a twinge of annoyance after hearing Drew's speech.
- The first time I read this, I felt a twinge of panic.
- They have made even the hardest-hearted of us feel a twinge of pity where few of us expected to find one.
- The plane stopped off in Thailand, when I suddenly became overwhelmed with a wave of curiosity and maybe just a twinge of compassion.
verbtwɪndʒtwinj [no object](of a part of the body) suffer a sudden, sharp localized pain. (身体某部分)剧痛,阵痛 the ankle still twinged, but the pain was slight Example sentencesExamples - Her back twinged with pain, she didn't want to do anything right now.
- The way he said Aiden twinged a nerve but I kept ignoring him.
- Every nerve was twinging with resolve to end it.
- She rolled over onto her back and stretched, feeling the muscles in her arms and legs twinge in pain.
- As soon as his right leg hit the ground, his knee twinged with pain.
- My ribs barely twinged, even at the quick change in my position.
- Leaning back in the seat of the car, Matt was happy to let Kate do all the driving; his leg was still twinging from the cut inflicted on it earlier.
- His entire body ached, with the remnants of aches all over, twinging his musculature here and there.
- Her heart twinged again, but she ignored it and stalked toward the window.
- He woke to a rap on the door and a flood of sunlight that caused his forehead to twinge in pain.
- He picked his bruised body gingerly off the floor, cursing as his abused hands twinged with pain.
- Her father had died almost seven years ago now and her heart still twinged whenever the door opened and he wasn't there to greet her.
- My stomach twinged in protest as I thought of the girls in the hallway, and I hoped to head off a stomachache with sleep.
- Jinx caught himself with his hands before he fell for the fourth time in ten minutes, swallowing the wince as his aching wrist twinged.
- His stomach twinged violently and he wretched upon the walkway.
- Deran had broken his left arm twice, himself; he hardly noticed when it twinged with bad weather.
- It twinged, it stabbed, and it sliced through his nerves.
- If Matt's jaw hadn't been twinging from the cut, it would have dropped.
- A nerve suddenly twinged in her chest, and without a second thought, she shot for the surface of the pool, suddenly afraid.
- She slung the bookbag over one shoulder, which twinged.
OriginOld English twengan ‘pinch, wring’, of Germanic origin. The noun dates from the mid 16th century. |