TWINGE


Meaning of TWINGE in English

twinge /twɪndʒ/ BrE AmE noun [countable]

[ Date: 1600-1700 ; Origin: twinge 'to pinch' (11-19 centuries) , from Old English twengan ]

1 . a sudden feeling of slight pain:

I felt a twinge of pain in my back.

2 . a twinge of guilt/envy/sadness/jealousy etc a sudden slight feeling of guilt etc:

He felt a sharp twinge of guilt for not taking the trouble to visit her.

• • •

THESAURUS

▪ pain noun [uncountable and countable] the feeling when part of your body hurts:

A broken leg can cause a lot of pain.

|

He felt a sharp pain in his chest.

▪ ache noun [uncountable and countable] a continuous pain, especially one that is not very bad. Most commonly used in compounds such as headache , toothache , and backache :

I felt an ache in my back after decorating all day.

|

Driving gives me a headache.

|

I’ve got stomach ache.

|

Do you have earache?

▪ twinge noun [countable] a sudden slight pain that comes and then disappears quickly:

When I bent down I felt a twinge in my back.

▪ discomfort noun [uncountable] formal an uncomfortable feeling in your body, or a slight pain:

The procedure takes five minutes and only causes slight discomfort.

▪ agony noun [uncountable] a feeling of great pain, or a situation in which you feel a lot of pain:

the agony of childbirth

|

I was in agony by the time I got to the hospital.

|

It was agony (=very painful) getting up out of bed.

▪ suffering noun [uncountable] continuous physical or mental pain, which makes someone very unhappy:

I just wanted someone to put an end to my suffering.

|

the suffering of the earthquake victims

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.