twinge in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

twinge in the PONS Dictionary

twinge Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

a twinge of conscience
American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Who hasn't felt the twinge of sadness when they realize that ultimately, they'll never make the impact on the world they think they will...
www.mtv.com
I feel a few twinges on occasion, especially when it's really cold but nothing that an ibuprofen doesn't fix.
thechart.blogs.cnn.com
Does he feel a twinge of regret at defacing them?
www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk
He's only ever had one twinge of regret at turning professional.
www.dailymail.co.uk
I know its every nuance and rumble and twinge.
www.eurekastreet.com.au
Not a pang, not an emptiness, not a tick or a twinge.
www.cnn.com
He knows our ovaries twinge before we do.
www.sugarscape.com
I also couldn't help but feel a twinge of guilt.
www.dailymail.co.uk
Whenever we are reminded of this feeling or anticipate it in the future, we get a twinge of abandonment distress that we experience as loneliness.
psychcentral.com
It was described as being quieter and more mature, sometimes offering an explosion of rock, more folkish and with a little twinge of country.
en.wikipedia.org

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