Causing or experiencing a slight prickling or stinging sensation.
‘a tingly sense of excitement’
‘What annoyed her most was not the pain but the tingly itchy sensation after the pain when her hair was pulled on.’
‘Every now and then I'll move my arm and I'll get this tingly sensation running all the way down it.’
‘But on a sadder note, I think my lips have developed antibodies to the tingly sensation.’
‘I felt a tingly sensation all through out my body as I ran to the hangar, as if something that really wasn't supposed to happen did.’
‘He began to kiss down my neck and tingly sensations overcame my body.’
‘Her lungs felt constricted and there was a slight tingly burning behind her eyes.’
‘You know when you've been clapping for a long time and your hands start to get a tingly sensation?’
‘Her whole body had a tingly sensation that she loved, and she wanted to savor it as long as she could.’
‘Her mind screamed out as she felt her body succumbing to the tingly sensation of the drugs.’
‘A tingly sensation spread throughout my body and I suddenly felt magically happy.’
‘A tingly feeling was creeping down my spine as he slowly rubbed his thumb in circles against the pulse in my wrist.’
‘Little tingly feelings crept back into me, but the hurt of last night tempered my reaction.’
‘And, now that I've talked about it so much, I'm kind of getting that tingly feeling that I want to read it after all.’
‘‘I have headaches, a tingly feeling all over the body and my stomach is in a mess every day,’ he said.’
‘I sat through the programme last night with that that tingly feeling you get from a truly exceptional piece of music and just thinking about it has brought that feeling back.’
‘The minute I put this stuff on my face felt all cool and tingly.’
‘Clearly this is television aimed at rich people, so they can have a vicariously tingly peek into the seedy underworld of carjacking.’
‘Parts of me are groggy, others sore and a few tingly.’
‘I felt the tingly, hot gush of adrenaline when I looked into the rear-view mirror.’
‘We all expected someone equally stellar, and a lot of names were bandied about in tingly expectation.’