muscle ●●●●●
Oxford 5000 vocabulary |B1|SPEAKING vocabularyWRITING vocabularyIELTS vocabulary mus‧cle /ˈmʌsəl/ noun
muscle verb
ماهیچه
استفاده کامل ازعضله ها، عضله، نیروی عضلانی، به زور وارد شدن، صدف دو کپه ای، صدف باریک دریایی ورودخانه ای، روانشناسی: ماهیچه، ورزش: به کار بردن تمام نیرو
▼ ادامه توضیحات دیکشنری؛ پس از بنر تبلیغاتی ▼
Synonyms & Related Words muscle[noun]Synonyms:- tendon, sinew
- strength, brawn, clout
(informal), forcefulness, might, power, stamina, weight
[verb]Synonyms:- muscle in: impose oneself, butt in, force one's way in
Contrasted words: impotence
Related Words: power,
strength [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English Dictionary I. mus‧cle1 S2 W3 /ˈmʌs
əl/
noun[
Date: 1300-1400;
Language: French;
Origin: Latin musculus 'little mouse, muscle, mussel', from mus 'mouse'; because a muscle moving looks like a mouse under the skin]
1. [uncountable and countable] one of the pieces of flesh inside your body that you use in order to move, and that connect your bones together:
Relax your stomach muscles, then stretch again. Regular exercise will help to strengthen your muscles. Rooney has pulled a muscle in his thigh and won’t play tomorrow.2. not move a muscle to stay completely still:
The soldier stood without moving a muscle.3. [uncountable] power or influence
military/economic/political etc muscle The unions have a lot of political muscle. The agreement will give the UN some muscle to enforce human rights.4. [uncountable] physical strength and power:
It took muscle to work in an old-fashioned kitchen.put some muscle into it (=used to tell someone to work harder) ⇒
flex your muscles at
flex1(2)
[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
II. muscle2 verb muscle your way into/through etc something to use your strength to go somewhere:
Joe and Tony muscled their way through the crowd.muscle in phrasal verb to use your power to get involved in or take control of something that someone else was doing, especially in business – used to show disapproval
muscle in on Banks are muscling in on the insurance business. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Collocations muscle noun ADJ. hard, powerful, strong | taut, tense, tight | cramped I walked up and down the aisle to stretch my cramped muscles.
tired | abdominal, arm, calf, facial, heart, thigh, etc. | skeletal VERB + MUSCLE flex, tense He flexed his muscles, then set off to run.
relax Learn how to relax tense muscles.
stretch | build (up), strengthen, tone (up) | pull, tear I laughed so hard I almost pulled a muscle. MUSCLE + VERB ache | clench, contract, stiffen, tense, tighten | go limp, loosen, relax, slacken | quiver, ripple, twitch His muscles rippled beneath his T-shirt as he worked.
control sth the muscles controlling speech production MUSCLE + NOUN cell, fibre, tissue | group | disease, pain | contraction, relaxation, spasm, tension | tone PREP. ~ in The muscles in my face tensed. [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲
Idioms muscleˈmʌsl See:
move a muscle [TahlilGaran] English Idioms Dictionary ▲