tingle in English

noun
1
a slight prickling or stinging sensation.
she felt a tingle in the back of her neck
verb
1
experience or cause to experience a slight prickling or stinging sensation.
she was tingling with excitement

Use "tingle" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "tingle" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "tingle", or refer to the context using the word "tingle" in the English Dictionary.

1. My conscience began to tingle.

2. She felt the tingle in her hands.

3. The music made my blood tingle.

4. I feel excited and I tingle everywhere.

5. I felt a sudden tingle of excitement.

6. The cold air made her face tingle.

7. Her whole body seemed to tingle with expectation.

8. There's a slight tingle in my wrists.

9. The cold caused a tingle in my fingers.

10. I tingle where I sat in the nettles.

11. You know, it just makes me fucking tingle!

12. I'm starting to think that tingle is just you being jealous.

13. The slap she gave him made his cheek tingle.

14. There's a... tingle that happens right before you do it.

15. A tingle of fear mixed with excitement came over me.

16. Ronni could feel her skin tingle from her scalp to her toes.

17. His fingers wrapped themselves round her ankles, sliding upwards, making her skin tingle.

18. When I look over and see Terry I tingle all over.

19. Did you get that little tingle when you stepped up to his front door?

20. Sometimes my lips or fingers feel numb or tingle for no reason.

21. I mean, I'd skipped the tingle phase and went straight to the drool phase.

22. exploring your lover's entire body with your tongue can make them tingle all over.

23. The tingle from the retinol is mild; my skin just felt a little warm.

24. There is a tingle in the woods around these trees, a frisson of excitement and danger.

25. As she warmed her hands by the fire, she felt a tingle in her fingers.

26. There's a line in that poem that makes my spine tingle every time I read it.

27. Ternary middle - bare polyester fibre regular polyester, chemistry fiber natural fiber, flame , cotton and tingle.

28. Your mouth will tingle, all of your tongue will indeed, as the principle declares, be engaged.

29. She did not feel the hair on her neck tingle or goose flesh run up her arms.

30. As always, I felt a rising tingle of excitement as I contemplated the meticulously shorn surfaces of my face.

31. Again he ran his left hand through his hair, but this time he felt a tingle of anticipation.

32. Those chords of searching bewilderment in the finale were timed to a microsecond and projected an awesome tingle of fear.

33. Her feet still hurt and she felt the tingle of cramp in her right arm where Jane's head rested heavily.

34. Seldom will you encounter a character who will make your fingers tingle so much in anticipation of closing them around his neck.

35. “‘“I am about to bring a calamity on this place, and the ears of anyone who hears about it will tingle.

36. He was smiling still, but there was something about the smile that sent a warning tingle dancing along her spine. Sentencedict.com

37. Hence, Jehovah declares: “Here I am bringing a calamity upon Jerusalem and Judah, of which if anyone hears both his ears will tingle. . . .

38. 12 That is what gives the palpitating reality to our moral life and makes it tingle with so strange and elaborate an excitement.

39. Perhaps sitting there, you had a little tingle of a desire for an emotion one eminent French sociologist called "ilinx," the delirium that comes with minor acts of chaos.

40. The shock can be turned down to the equivalent of a tingle to alert to an unwanted behavior, making the shock Collar especially helpful in getting a distracted animals attention

41. ‘‘Negative Cosecant squared x,’ I murmured, feeling as light-headed and tingle-infested as I had when I'd received a perfect score.’ Origin Early 18th century from modern Latin Cosecant-, from co- ‘mutually’ + Latin secant- ‘cutting’ (from the verb secare).

42. ‘‘Negative Cosecant squared x,’ I murmured, feeling as light-headed and tingle-infested as I had when I'd received a perfect score.’ Origin Early 18th century from modern Latin Cosecant-, from co- ‘mutually’ + Latin secant- ‘cutting’ (from the verb secare).

43. Learning how to speak with different word order is like driving on the different side of a street if you go to certain country, or the feeling that you get when you put Witch Hazel around your eyes and you feel the tingle.

44. And the LORD spake by his servants the prophets, saying, Because Manasseh king of Judah hath done these abominations, and hath done wickedly above all that the Amorites did, which were before him, and hath made Judah also to sin with his idols: Therefore thus saith the LORD God of Israel, Behold, I am bringing such evil upon Jerusalem and Judah, that whosoever heareth of it, both his ears shall tingle.