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Stabbing   /stˈæbɪŋ/   Listen
Stabbing

adjective
1.
Causing physical or especially psychological injury.  Synonym: wounding.  "Wounding and false charges of disloyalty"
2.
Painful as if caused by a sharp instrument.  Synonyms: cutting, keen, knifelike, lancinate, lancinating, piercing.  "Keen winds" , "Knifelike cold" , "Piercing knifelike pains" , "Piercing cold" , "Piercing criticism" , "A stabbing pain" , "Lancinating pain"



Stab

verb
(past & past part. stabbed; pres. part. stabbing)
1.
Use a knife on.  Synonym: knife.
2.
Stab or pierce.  Synonym: jab.
3.
Poke or thrust abruptly.  Synonyms: dig, jab, poke, prod.



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"Stabbing" Quotes from Famous Books



... annoyance. He had even the politeness to unfasten the halberd, and, bending forward, raising his arms and stamping with his heels, he made a show of hamstringing a horse, stabbing as if with a bayonet and ...
— Bouvard and Pecuchet - A Tragi-comic Novel of Bourgeois Life • Gustave Flaubert

... as though they were being pierced by red-hot needles; while the stabbing pain in his head increased every moment. Had he witnessed such suffering in another he would instantly have set about alleviating it so far as his skill might allow; but he told himself that there was only one effectual remedy for him and that ...
— Afterwards • Kathlyn Rhodes

... with Cockney accents; English engineers in lordly pugrees, and tourists from New England who seem servants of their own tortoise-shell spectacles; comfortable ebon mammies with silver bangles and kerchiefs of stabbing scarlet, dressed in starched pink-and-blue gingham, vending guavas and green Toboga Island pineapples. Carl gapes at Panamanian nuns and Chilean consuls, French peasant laborers and indignant Irish foremen and German concessionaries with dueling scars and high collars. Gold Spanish signs ...
— The Trail of the Hawk - A Comedy of the Seriousness of Life • Sinclair Lewis

... everybody had turned against him. "Now, I want to tell you something—we're chums, and you mustn't give me away. These fools think I'm going to try to escape, but I ain't. You see, they can't hang me for stabbing that coward, but they'll shut me up for a year or two, and I've got to keep healthy, don't you see? When I get out o' this I strike for the West, don't you see? And I've got to be able to do a day's work. Look at this arm." He stripped his strong ...
— The Eagle's Heart • Hamlin Garland

... had half believed Zeppa to be an apparition. What even if that were true? Had he not boastfully said more than once that he would defy the foul fiend himself if he should attempt to thwart him? Then his spirit bounded into a region of disappointed rage when he thought of the lost opportunity of stabbing his enemy to the heart. After that, unbidden, and in spite of him, it dropped into an abyss of something like fierce despair when he recalled the past surveyed the present, and forecast the future. Truly, if hell ever does begin to men on earth, it began ...
— The Madman and the Pirate • R.M. Ballantyne


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