squirm
/skwɝm/
UK: /skwɜːm/
squirm
English
Verb Top 25,326
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Definition
To twist one's body with snakelike motions.
Etymology
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 imitative or related to worm (in the sense of writhing movement) or swarm.
Example Sentences
- "The prisoner managed to squirm out of the straitjacket."
- "[…] around us there had sprung up a perfect bedlam of screams and hisses and a seething caldron of hideous reptiles, devoid of fear and filled only with hunger and with rage. They clambered, squirmed and wriggled to the deck, forcing us steadily backward, though we emptied our pistols into them."
- ""Throw it away, dear, do," she said, as they got into the road; but Jacob squirmed away from her […]"
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