Need another word that means the same as “sting”? Find 89 synonyms and 30 related words for “sting” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Sting” are: bite, insect bite, pang, sting operation, stinging, bunco, bunco game, bunko, bunko game, con, con game, confidence game, confidence trick, flimflam, hustle, prick, wound, injury, smarting, smart, tingling, tingle, pricking, heartache, heartbreak, agony, torture, torment, hurt, pain, anguish, distress, desolation, misery, sharpness, severity, edge, pointedness, asperity, pungency, acerbity, acidity, tartness, swindle, fraud, piece of deception, trickery, cheat, bit of sharp practice, twinge, burn, stick, injure, be painful, be irritated, be sore, ache, upset, make miserable, cut to the quick, sear, grieve, mortify, provoke, goad, incite, spur, prod, rouse, stir up, drive, move, motivate, galvanize, stimulate, defraud, fleece, gull
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “sting” as a noun can have the following definitions:
acerbity | A rough and bitter manner. Their relationship was built on a certain mutual acerbity. |
acidity | Street name for lysergic acid diethylamide. The increased acidity of rainfall. |
agony | Extreme physical or mental suffering. His last agony. |
anguish | Extreme mental distress. Philip gave a cry of anguish. |
asperity | Harshness of manner. The asperity of northern winters. |
bit of sharp practice | A unit of measurement of information (from binary + digit); the amount of information in a system having two equiprobable states. |
bite | An instance of a fish taking the bait. Percy s dog had given her a nasty bite. |
bunco | A swindle in which you cheat at gambling or persuade a person to buy worthless property. A bunco artist. |
bunco game | Your occupation or line of work. |
bunko | A swindle in which you cheat at gambling or persuade a person to buy worthless property. |
bunko game | The game equipment needed in order to play a particular game. |
cheat | An act of cheating a fraud or deception. |
con | A swindle in which you cheat at gambling or persuade a person to buy worthless property. The Charter is a glossy public relations con. |
con game | A swindle in which you cheat at gambling or persuade a person to buy worthless property. |
confidence game | A feeling of trust (in someone or something. |
confidence trick | A feeling of trust (in someone or something. |
desolation | A state of complete emptiness or destruction. In choked desolation she watched him leave. |
distress | A state of physical strain, especially difficulty in breathing. To his distress he saw that she was trembling. |
edge | The outside limit of an object or area or surface; a place farthest away from the center of something. They pushed themselves to the edge of exhaustion. |
flimflam | A confidence trick. Pseudo intellectual flimflam. |
fraud | Something intended to deceive; deliberate trickery intended to gain an advantage. Mediums exposed as tricksters and frauds. |
heartache | Emotional anguish or grief, typically caused by the loss or absence of someone loved. A good friend understands your heartaches as well as your joys. |
heartbreak | Intense sorrow caused by loss of a loved one (especially by death. An unforgettable tale of joy and heartbreak. |
hurt | Feelings of mental or physical pain. Rolling properly into a fall minimizes hurt. |
hustle | A state of great activity. The hustle and bustle of the big cities. |
injury | An instance of being injured. Compensation for injury to feelings. |
insect bite | Small air-breathing arthropod. |
misery | A feeling of intense unhappiness. She was exhausted by her misery and grief. |
pain | A somatic sensation of acute discomfort. She s a pain. |
pang | A mental pain or distress. A pang of conscience. |
piece of deception | An artistic or literary composition. |
pointedness | The property of a shape that tapers to a sharp tip. The pointedness of his sarcasm was unmistakable. |
pricking | The act of puncturing with a small point. |
pungency | Wit having a sharp and caustic quality. He commented with typical pungency. |
severity | Extreme plainness. Sentences should reflect the severity of the crime. |
sharpness | A strong odor or taste property. The sharpness of strange spices. |
smart | Intelligence; acumen. Sorrow is the effect of smart and smart the effect of faith. |
smarting | The fact or sensation of feeling a sharp stinging pain. Ammonia can cause smarting of the eyes and breathing difficulties. |
sting operation | A kind of pain; something as sudden and painful as being stung. |
stinging | A kind of pain; something as sudden and painful as being stung. He felt the stinging of nettles. |
swindle | The act of swindling by some fraudulent scheme. He is mixed up in a 10 million insurance swindle. |
tartness | The taste experience when vinegar or lemon juice is taken into the mouth. |
tingle | A somatic sensation as from many tiny prickles. A tingle of anticipation. |
tingling | A somatic sensation as from many tiny stings. |
torment | A feeling of intense annoyance caused by being tormented. The journey must have been a torment for them. |
torture | Intense feelings of suffering; acute mental or physical pain. The torture of political prisoners. |
trickery | Verbal misrepresentation intended to take advantage of you in some way. The dealer resorted to trickery. |
wound | The act of inflicting a wound. The new crisis has opened old wounds. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “sting” as a verb can have the following definitions:
ache | Suffer from a continuous dull pain. She looked so tired that my heart ached for her. |
be irritated | Represent, as of a character on stage. |
be painful | Form or compose. |
be sore | Be identical to; be someone or something. |
bite | Be very bad, unpleasant, or unfortunate. Gunny invariably tried to bite her. |
burn | Burn at the stake. Her forehead was burning and her throat ached. |
cheat | Gain an advantage over or deprive of something by using unfair or deceitful methods; defraud. She cheated death in a spectacular crash. |
cut to the quick | Be able to manage or manage successfully. |
defraud | Illegally obtain money from (someone) by deception. He used a second identity to defraud the bank of thousands of pounds. |
distress | Bring into difficulties or distress especially financial hardship. I didn t mean to distress you. |
drive | Be licensed or competent to drive a motor vehicle. He drives a bread truck. |
fleece | Cover as if with a fleece. The sky was half blue half fleeced with white clouds. |
galvanize | Shock or excite (someone) into taking action. Galvanized into action. |
goad | Goad or provoke as by constant criticism. He was trying to goad her into a fight. |
grieve | Feel intense sorrow. His behavior grieves his mother. |
gull | Make a fool or dupe of. |
hurt | Hurt the feelings of. She hurt me when she did not include me among her guests. |
incite | Urge on; cause to act. They conspired to incite riots. |
injure | Hurt the feelings of. He injured his back helping the girl. |
make miserable | Create or design, often in a certain way. |
mortify | (of flesh) be affected by gangrene or necrosis. They wish to return to heaven by mortifying the flesh. |
motivate | Request (something) and present facts and arguments in support of one’s request. He said he would motivate funds to upgrade the food stalls. |
move | Have a turn make one s move in a game. He justly moves one s derision. |
pain | Cause mental or physical pain to. Her legs had been paining her. |
provoke | Evoke or provoke to appear or occur. Rachel refused to be provoked. |
rouse | Cause to be agitated excited or roused. Rouse the beer as the hops are introduced. |
sear | Burn or scorch the surface of (something) with a sudden, intense heat. A sharp pang of disappointment seared her. |
smart | (of a wound or part of the body) feel or cause a sharp stinging pain. Her legs were scratched and smarting. |
spur | Strike with a spur. Governments cut interest rates to spur demand. |
stick | Come or be in close contact with stick or hold together and resist separation. Stick your thumb in the crack. |
stimulate | Raise levels of physiological or nervous activity in (the body or any biological system. The women are given fertility drugs to stimulate their ovaries. |
stir up | Affect emotionally. |
swindle | Use deception to deprive (someone) of money or possessions. He was said to have swindled 62 5 million from the state owned cement industry. |
tingle | Cause a stinging or tingling sensation. A standing ovation that tingled your spine. |
torment | Torment emotionally or mentally. The children tormented the stuttering teacher. |
twinge | Squeeze tightly between the fingers. Stop the exercises if the tummy twinges. |
upset | Form metals with a swage. The dam will upset the ecological balance. |
wound | Inflict a wound on. The sergeant was seriously wounded. |
adhere | Follow through or carry out a plan without deviation. The account adhered firmly to fact. |
bee | An insect of a large group to which the honeybee belongs including many solitary as well as social kinds. A sewing bee. |
excitation | The action of exciting or the state of being excited; excitement. Two parallel coils with opposing excitation windings. |
gadfly | A person who annoys or criticizes others in order to provoke them into action. Always a gadfly he attacked intellectual orthodoxies. |
hornet | Large stinging paper wasp. |
hurt | Hurt the feelings of. Ow You re hurting me. |
nag | A person who nags someone. He s always nagging at her for staying out late. |
nudge | Prod (someone) gently with one’s elbow in order to attract attention. She appreciated the nudge to her memory. |
pang | A sudden sharp pain or painful emotion. A pang of conscience. |
pest | A serious sometimes fatal infection of rodents caused by Yersinia pestis and accidentally transmitted to humans by the bite of a flea that has bitten an infected animal. The tomato plant attracts a pest called whitefly. |
pierce | Make a hole in (the ears or other part of the body) so as to wear jewellery in them. They were seeking to pierce the anti ballistic missile defences. |
pin | An attack on a piece or pawn which is thereby pinned. He pinned the badge on to his lapel. |
ping | Hit with a pinging noise. The ping of the oven timer. |
poke | Poke or thrust abruptly. She gave the fire a poke. |
slot | Be placed or able to be placed into a slot. He followed the deer s slot over the soft turf to the edge of the trees. |
spiny | Having spines. A spiny problem. |
stab | A wound made by stabbing. A stitch stabbed at her side. |
stake | A pole or stake set up to mark something as the start or end of a race track. Stake out the path. |
stick | Stick to firmly. Stick drawings of a man and girl. |
stimulation | Encouragement of something to make it develop or become more active. Ovarian stimulation for in vitro fertilization. |
thatch | Cover with thatch. The rain drummed noisily on the thatch above her head. |
thorn | A thorny bush shrub or tree especially a hawthorn. He s a thorn in my flesh. |
thorny | Causing distress, difficulty, or trouble. A thorny problem for our team to solve. |
titillate | Arouse (someone) to interest or mild excitement, especially through sexually suggestive images or words. The press are paid to titillate the public. |
twinge | Feel a sudden sharp, local pain. Twinges of conscience. |
wasp | A solitary winged insect with a narrow waist mostly distantly related to the social wasps and including many parasitic kinds. |
wattle | Make enclose or fill up with wattle. |
wedge | A shot made with a wedge. The wedge of horsemen crashed forward. |
The synonyms and related words of "Brag" are: blow, bluster, boast, gas, gasconade, shoot a…
The synonyms and related words of "Pierce" are: thrust, make a hole in, penetrate, puncture,…
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