Amused vs Ticklish - What's the difference?
amused | ticklish |
(amuse)
Pleasurably entertained.
Displaying amusement.
(usually, with a complement) Enjoying humor aspects (of something).
Sensitive or susceptible to being tickled.
Touchy, sensitive, or delicate.
* 1977 , , The Honourable Schoolboy , Folio Society 2010, page 162:
* '>citation
As adjectives the difference between amused and ticklish
is that amused is pleasurably entertained while ticklish is sensitive or susceptible to being tickled.As a verb amused
is (amuse).amused
English
Verb
(head)- While waiting for the bus, I amused myself by performing a mime interpretation of the Gettysburg Address.
Adjective
(en adjective)- The children chased one another in a circle in front of their amused parents.
- He was amused to note the disarray of his opponents.
- He was very amused by the lyrics.
- She was amused with their antics.
- The entertainers parodied his speech. He was not amused .
Anagrams
*ticklish
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- She is ticklish only on her tummy and the bottoms of her feet.
- Opening round three, Enderby moved the ticklish issue of whether to advise the Hong Kong government of the intelligence regarding Ko.
