25.03.2013 Views

frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

4 stick, jab, prick: The child's hands had been prickled by the<br />

chestnuts.<br />

prickly adj. 1 bristly, thorny, brambly, spiny, barbed, briery,<br />

spinous, spiky, Technical setaceous, setose, acanthoid,<br />

aciculate, aculeate, muricate, spiculate: Dad's face is all<br />

prickly when he hasn't shaved. 2 tingling, stinging, pricking,<br />

prickling, itchy, crawly, crawling: The squeak of the chalk on<br />

the blackboard gives me a prickly feeling. 3 touchy, irritable,<br />

petulant, cantankerous, testy, waspish, bad-tempered, peevish,<br />

fractious, short-tempered, curmudgeonly, Colloq cranky: Moira<br />

gets a bit prickly if you ask her why she married Noel. 4<br />

nettlesome, thorny, ticklish, touchy, troublesome, intricate,<br />

complicated, complex, knotty, hard, difficult, contentious: The<br />

prickly problem of how to pay for the university must still be<br />

faced.<br />

pride n. 1 honour, proudness, self-esteem, self-respect, amour<br />

propre, dignity: It is gratifying to be able to look with pride<br />

on one's children's achievements. 2 conceit, egotism,<br />

self-importance, vanity, hubris, arrogance, overconfidence,<br />

overweeningness, self-admiration, self-love, self-importance,<br />

smugness, haughtiness, hauteur, snobbery, snobbishness, Colloq<br />

uppitiness: Pride goeth before a fall. Her pride stems from an<br />

exaggerated notion of her own worth. 3 boast, flower, best,<br />

prize, pride and joy, treasure, jewel, gem: Those model railway<br />

trains are Eustace's pride and joy.<br />

--v. 4 Usually, pride oneself on. be proud of, take pride in,<br />

delight in, revel in, celebrate, glory in: Irena prides herself<br />

on having made her own way in life, without anyone's help.<br />

priest n. priestess, clergyman or clergywoman, ecclesiastic, cleric,<br />

churchman or churchwoman, reverend, vicar, divine, man or woman<br />

of the cloth, man or woman of God, curate, confessor, minister<br />

(of the Gospel), servant of God, father, mother, holy man or<br />

woman, preacher, missionary, evangelist, abb‚, abbot or abbess,<br />

Colloq padre: The high priest muttered some incantations over<br />

the body of the sacrificial victim.<br />

priestly adj. clerical, ecclesiastic, pastoral, hieratic, sacerdotal;<br />

ministerial, canonical, missionary: She has taken her priestly<br />

vows.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!