tickled / ˈtɪk əl /

痒痒的痒痒发痒心痒痒的

tickled3 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

tick·led, tick·ling.

  1. to touch or stroke lightly with the fingers, a feather, etc., so as to excite a tingling or itching sensation in; titillate.
  2. to poke some sensitive part of the body so as to excite spasmodic laughter.
  3. to excite agreeably; gratify: to tickle someone's vanity.
v. 无主动词 verb

tick·led, tick·ling.

  1. to be affected with a tingling or itching sensation, as from light touches or strokes: I tickle all over.
  2. to produce such a sensation.
n. 名词 noun
  1. an act or instance of tickling.
  2. a tickling sensation.

tickled 近义词

adj. 形容词 adjective

glad

更多tickled例句

  1. Somewhere in the Afterlife, Laurence Sterne must have been tickled to see his fiendish book infused with new life.
  2. The one thing that may have tickled them more was when Mitch McConnell showed up on stage brandishing a rifle.
  3. He was just tickled and amused by the situation, punky and very funny.
  4. Steel balls caromed around the table as the player massaged, tickled, pressed, and slammed the flipper buttons.
  5. This potential use seems to have tickled the imaginations of many, many bitcoin fanciers.
  6. It stood on a sandy road, and a cold wind tickled his knickerbockered legs.
  7. "I've told Judy to bemember," said Punch, wiggling, for his father's beard tickled his neck.
  8. I'd be tickled to have the hull town come out an' see me cuttin' figger eight's in the clouds.
  9. But I could make it a sight better 'n it is an' it might grow plenty of them posies Dorothy's so tickled with.
  10. This tribute to their feelings so tickled the women that they set down their tea-cups and laughed prodigiously.