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headache

/hed-eyk/US // ˈhɛdˌeɪk //UK // (ˈhɛdˌeɪk) //

头疼的问题,头疼,头疼的事,头痛

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a pain located in the head, as over the eyes, at the temples, or at the base of the skull.
    • : an annoying or bothersome person, situation, activity, etc.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Still, no one likes to deal with a sore arm and an annoying headache for an entire day, so you might be tempted to take preventative painkillers before getting the vaccine.

  • Adding to the city’s budget headaches is a ballooning annual pension payment that the city and its mayor have little control over.

  • The founders also left to their deputies future and ongoing antitrust headaches, as evidenced by Pichai being called to testify before Congress numerous times since the founders’ departure.

  • Despite all the headaches that come with it, homeownership is still the American dream for many.

  • Tiny screens require you to strain your eyes to make out fine details, so you’ll most likely end up with a headache, another common and annoying symptom of gaming sickness.

  • Within days of the first symptom, a headache, the patient was fighting for his life.

  • Why is such a simple countermeasure against headache and disease still so unpopular?

  • Severe belly pains, a headache, and fever were the only conclusions Breman could draw.

  • For novice and fitness-enthusiasts alike, the Amiigo's intelligent pattern recognition alleviates a major headache at the gym.

  • His headache cured, the man went home and two months later, he was given a clean bill of health.

  • When the family returned from the court house, Orlean had retired at once, complaining of a headache.

  • Another frequent symptom is repeated and constant headache, which, in the present series of cases, existed in 41.1 per cent.

  • A tightness took him about the heart, and behind his eyes that pulse of red darkness presaged the beginning of a violent headache.

  • The fumes of the tobacco were carried by the air into the house, and brought back Ruth's sick headache.

  • To the credit of Germany, I must say there was not a shadow of a headache the next morning.