'Alternative form of nerve-racking.'에 대한 English 단어
위에서 "Alternative form of nerve-racking."에 관련된 단어를 찾으실 수 있습니다. 단어 위에 마우스를 올리면 정의를 볼 수 있습니다. 검색 아이콘을 클릭하면 더 적합한 단어를 찾을 수 있습니다.
검색 결과
noun
- any nerve whose activity tends to reduce the activity or tone of the body part it serves
- a device used by physician to press a part down or aside
- any skeletal muscle that draws a body part down
- (neuroanatomy, physiology) A nerve or nerve fiber that decreases the activity or the tone of the organ or the part it innervates, such as lowering the blood pressure.
- (anatomy) Any of several muscles whose contraction pulls down a part of the body.
- An instrument used to push something out of the way during an examination.
adj
- Affecting or involving the nerves or nervous system.
- Supplied with nerves; innervated.
- Easily agitated or alarmed; edgy, on edge.
- Apprehensive, anxious, hesitant, worried.
- excited in anticipation
- unpredictably excitable (especially of horses)
- of or relating to the nervous system
- easily agitated
- causing or fraught with or showing anxiety
noun
- a method of therapy that involves physical or electrical therapeutic treatment
- a classification of propositions on the basis of whether they claim necessity or possibility or impossibility
- verb inflections that express how the action or state is conceived by the speaker
- a particular sense
- (astrology) That whether a zodiac sign is cardinal, fixed or mutable
- (semiotics) A particular way in which the information is to be encoded for presentation to humans, i.e. to the type of sign and to the status of reality ascribed to or claimed by a sign, text or genre.
- (logic) The classification of propositions on the basis on whether they claim possibility, impossibility, contingency or necessity; mode.
- (grammar) The inflection of a verb that shows how its action is conceived by the speaker.
- (music) The subject concerning certain diatonic scales known as musical modes.
- The fact of being modal.
- (law) The quality of being limited by a condition.
- (medicine) A method of diagnosis or therapy.
- (sociology) The way in which infrastructure and knowledge of how to use it give rise to a meaningful pattern of interaction (a concept in Anthony Giddens's structuration theory).
- Any of the senses (such as sight or taste)
- (theology) The organization and structure of the church, as distinct from sodality or parachurch organizations.
noun
- (physiology) the effect of a stimulus (on nerves or organs etc.)
- any stimulating information or event; acts to arouse action
- mutual sexual fondling prior to sexual intercourse
- the act of arousing an organism to action
- (biology) Any action or condition that creates a response; sensory input. [from 18th c.]
- An activity causing excitement or pleasure; the act of stimulating.
- A pushing or goading toward action. [from 16th c.]
noun
- any nerve whose activity tends to reduce the activity or tone of the body part it serves
- a device used by physician to press a part down or aside
- any skeletal muscle that draws a body part down
- (neuroanatomy, physiology) A nerve or nerve fiber that decreases the activity or the tone of the organ or the part it innervates, such as lowering the blood pressure.
- (anatomy) Any of several muscles whose contraction pulls down a part of the body.
- An instrument used to push something out of the way during an examination.
noun
- a method of therapy that involves physical or electrical therapeutic treatment
- a classification of propositions on the basis of whether they claim necessity or possibility or impossibility
- verb inflections that express how the action or state is conceived by the speaker
- a particular sense
- (astrology) That whether a zodiac sign is cardinal, fixed or mutable
- (semiotics) A particular way in which the information is to be encoded for presentation to humans, i.e. to the type of sign and to the status of reality ascribed to or claimed by a sign, text or genre.
- (logic) The classification of propositions on the basis on whether they claim possibility, impossibility, contingency or necessity; mode.
- (grammar) The inflection of a verb that shows how its action is conceived by the speaker.
- (music) The subject concerning certain diatonic scales known as musical modes.
- The fact of being modal.
- (law) The quality of being limited by a condition.
- (medicine) A method of diagnosis or therapy.
- (sociology) The way in which infrastructure and knowledge of how to use it give rise to a meaningful pattern of interaction (a concept in Anthony Giddens's structuration theory).
- Any of the senses (such as sight or taste)
- (theology) The organization and structure of the church, as distinct from sodality or parachurch organizations.
noun
- (physiology) the effect of a stimulus (on nerves or organs etc.)
- any stimulating information or event; acts to arouse action
- mutual sexual fondling prior to sexual intercourse
- the act of arousing an organism to action
- (biology) Any action or condition that creates a response; sensory input. [from 18th c.]
- An activity causing excitement or pleasure; the act of stimulating.
- A pushing or goading toward action. [from 16th c.]
adj
- Affecting or involving the nerves or nervous system.
- Supplied with nerves; innervated.
- Easily agitated or alarmed; edgy, on edge.
- Apprehensive, anxious, hesitant, worried.
- excited in anticipation
- unpredictably excitable (especially of horses)
- of or relating to the nervous system
- easily agitated
- causing or fraught with or showing anxiety