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  1. The meaning of SQUIRM is to twist about like a worm : fidget. How to use squirm in a sentence.

    • Etymology
    • Pronunciation
    • Verb

    First recorded 1690's, originally used of eels; cognate with Scots squimmer (“to wriggle, squirm”). Of uncertain origin. Compare dialectal quirm, whirm (“to disappear quickly, vanish suddenly and mysteriously”), Norwegian kverva (“to turn around, take away, remove, shrink”), from Old Norse hverfa (“to turn, vanish”). Alternatively, perhaps imitativ...

    (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /skwɜːm/
    (General American) IPA(key): /skwɝm/
    Rhymes: -ɜː(ɹ)m

    squirm (third-person singular simple present squirms, present participle squirming, simple past and past participle squirmed) 1. To twist one's body with snakelike motions. 1.1. Synonyms: writhe, wriggle 1.2. The prisoner managed to squirmout of the straitjacket. 1.1. 1918 September–November, Edgar Rice Burroughs, “The Land That Time Forgot”, in Th...

  2. Jun 8, 2023 · twist. mid-14c., "flat part of a hinge" (now obsolete), probably from Old English -twist "divided object; fork; rope" (as in mæsttwist "mast rope, stay;" candeltwist "wick"), from Proto-Germanic *twis-, from PIE root *dwo- "two." Original senses suggest "dividing in two" (source also of. wiggle.

  3. Dec 6, 2023 · Key Takeaways. Though the F-word was first in print around 1500, etymologists aren’t sure of its origins. For the next 500 years, it was censored in print and polite society, yet remained...

  4. Sep 26, 2018 · The F-word was recorded in a dictionary in 1598 (John Florio’s A Worlde of Wordes, London: Arnold Hatfield for Edw. Blount). It is remotely derived from the Latin futuere and Old German ficken/fucken meaning ‘to strike or penetrate’, which had the slang meaning to copulate.

  5. Slang meaning “person who is easily deceived” is first attested 1836, in American English, on notion of naivete; the verb in this sense is from 1939. But another theory traces the slang meaning to the fish called a sucker (1753), on the notion of being easy to catch in their annual migrations.

  6. to move from side to side in an awkward way, sometimes because of nervousness, embarrassment, or pain: Nobody spoke for at least five minutes and Rachel squirmed in her chair with embarrassment. The fish squirmed on the ground for a few moments and then lay still. Synonyms. twist.

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