Online Dictionary: translate word or phrase from Indonesian to English or vice versa, and also from english to english on-line.
Hasil cari dari kata atau frase: Pinched (0.02814 detik)
Found 4 items, similar to Pinched.
English → Indonesian (Kamus Landak)
Definition: pinch
mencubit
English → Indonesian (quick)
Definition: pinched
gentas
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: pinched
pinched
adj 1: sounding as if the nose were pinched;
“a whining nasal
voice” [syn:
adenoidal,
nasal]
2: very thin especially from disease or hunger or cold;
“emaciated bony hands”;
“a nightmare population of gaunt
men and skeletal boys”;
“eyes were haggard and cavernous”;
“small pinched faces”;
“kept life in his wasted frame only
by grim concentration” [syn:
bony,
cadaverous,
emaciated,
gaunt,
haggard,
skeletal,
wasted]
3: not having enough money to pay for necessities [syn:
hard up
,
impecunious,
in straitened circumstances(p),
penniless,
penurious]
4: as if squeezed uncomfortably tight;
“her pinched toes in her
pointed shoes were killing her”
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Pinched
Pinch
\Pinch\, v. t. [imp. & p. p.
Pinched; p. pr. & vb. n.
Pinching.] [F. pincer, probably fr. OD. pitsen to pinch;
akin to G. pfetzen to cut, pinch; perhaps of Celtic origin.
Cf.
Piece.]
1. To press hard or squeeze between the ends of the fingers,
between teeth or claws, or between the jaws of an
instrument; to squeeze or compress, as between any two
hard bodies.
[1913 Webster]
2. to seize; to grip; to bite; -- said of animals. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]
He [the hound] pinched and pulled her down.
--Chapman.
[1913 Webster]
3. To plait. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]
Full seemly her wimple ipinched was. --Chaucer.
[1913 Webster]
4. Figuratively: To cramp; to straiten; to oppress; to
starve; to distress; as, to be pinched for money.
[1913 Webster]
Want of room . . . pinching a whole nation. --Sir W.
Raleigh.
[1913 Webster]
5. To move, as a railroad car, by prying the wheels with a
pinch. See
Pinch, n., 4.
[1913 Webster]
6. To seize by way of theft; to steal; to lift. [Slang]
--Robert Barr.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]
7. to catch; to arrest (a criminal).
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]
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