Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    aching
    /ˈeɪkɪŋ/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Aching is the present participle of ache, which means to have a continuous pain that is unpleasant but not very strong. Learn more about the usage, synonyms, and examples of aching from the Cambridge Dictionary.

  3. Aching is an adjective that means that aches or causes distress or longing. Learn the synonyms, examples, word history, and etymology of aching from Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  4. Anything that's aching is sore and painful. After a hike up the side of a steep mountain or a long day walking around a city, you'll want to rest your aching feet. To ache is to feel a dull, constant pain, and aching things ache.

  5. Aching is an adjective that means causing physical pain or distress, or full of or precipitating nostalgia, grief, loneliness, etc. Learn more about its origin, usage, and synonyms from Dictionary.com.

  6. Aching is the present participle of ache, which means to have a continuous pain that is unpleasant but not very strong. Learn more about the verb ache, its synonyms, antonyms, and related words and phrases.

  7. Ache is a noun or a verb that means a continuous pain that is unpleasant but not very strong. It can also be used with parts of the body to mean a pain in that part, or with the preposition for to mean to miss something.

  8. Aching means causing or feeling a dull and steady pain, or having a painful yearning or sorrow. Find out the pronunciation, translations, and examples of aching in different contexts.