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tingling

[ US /ˈtɪŋɡəɫɪŋ, ˈtɪŋɡɫɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /tˈɪŋɡəlɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a somatic sensation as from many tiny stings
ADJECTIVE
  1. exciting by touching lightly so as to cause laughter or twitching movements

How To Use tingling In A Sentence

  • Afterwards, all three put on a jaw-dropping a cappella gospel medley that left everyone's spine tingling with pleasure.
  • Although the World Cup is all encompassing at the moment, when it comes to sport there is no more spine-tingling moment than when 65,000 fans at Murrayfield sing ‘Flower of Scotland’.
  • It was not a spine-tingling speech, the delivery was rather wooden. Times, Sunday Times
  • There were mild sensations of tingling pain in certain points in the left foot which, according to the therapist, correspond to the lung and solar plexus regions.
  • From rowing lake and canoe rapids to velodrome and swimming pool, the cheers of frenzied spectators have been spine-tingling. The Sun
  • I came to intellectually accept the existence of this energy and often cited it when chatting with friends, but deep down I wondered whether it really existed and whether it might be simply a primitive word for the circulation of the blood, the tingling of nerves, the flow of lymph, or, more technically, the bioelectric energy of life stimulated by the charge potential that exists across cell membranes. Arthur Rosenfeld: Do You Feel the Energy of Life?
  • I knew, impotent as I was, that I _could_ play it -- I could feel the sense of power tingling through my own impuissance. The Making Of A Novelist An Experiment In Autobiography
  • I'd get this tingling feeling. The Sun
  • Then he sprints off again, and is soon delivering spine-tingling power falsettos into his microphone.
  • I wasn't breathing; my whole body was tingling and trembling and I felt as though I was shaking when the ground beneath us was still.
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