prickly

adj

Etymology

From prickle + -y.

Definitions

  1. Covered with sharp points.

    • The prickly pear is a cactus; you have to peel it before eating it to remove the spines and the tough skin.
  2. Easily irritated.

    • He has a prickly personality. He doesn't get along with people because he is easily set off.
  3. Difficult

    Difficult; complicated; hairy or thorny.

    • It was a prickly situation.
    • People who are prickly can’t be hurt any more. They’ve had it. So we just have to be prickly to make sure nobody’s going to come in and grab us.
  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. In a prickly manner.

      • Striding across stage in his bright white jacket, his voice soaring and cracking – like Charlie Parker’s – he was nervous but prickly eloquent, caustic yet encouraging.
    2. Something that gives a pricking sensation

      Something that gives a pricking sensation; a sharp object.

      • Below, way out on the flat, Blue had seen a light green that could be graze but up here was nothing 'cept all kinds of prickly bushes, and too many of them. Ground-spreading pricklies that reached out to jump at a horse's belly […]
      • Dad, I need to ride on your shoulders because the pricklies hurt my feet.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for prickly. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA