noun, verb, -dled, -dling.| 1. | a small, slender, rodlike instrument, usually of polished steel, with a sharp point at one end and an eye or hole for thread at the other, for passing thread through cloth to make stitches in sewing. |
| 2. | any of various similar, usually considerably larger, implements for making stitches, as one for use in knitting or one hooked at the end for use in crocheting. |
| 3. | Medicine/Medical.
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| 4. | Informal. an injection of a drug or medicine; shot. |
| 5. | any of various objects resembling or suggesting a needle. |
| 6. | the tapered stylus at the end of a phonographic tonearm, used to transmit vibrations from a record groove to a transducer for conversion to audible signals. |
| 7. | Electricity. magnetic needle. |
| 8. | a pointed instrument, or stylus, used in engraving, etching, or the like. |
| 9. | Botany. a needle-shaped leaf, as of a conifer: a pine needle. |
| 10. | Zoology. a slender sharp spicule. |
| 11. | Chemistry, Mineralogy. a needlelike crystal. |
| 12. | a sharp-pointed mass or pinnacle of rock. |
| 13. | an obelisk or a tapering, four-sided shaft of stone: Cleopatra's Needle. |
| 14. | Also called needle beam. Building Trades. a short beam passed through a wall as a temporary support. |
| 15. | to sew or pierce with or as if with a needle: to needle a patch on a sleeve. |
| 16. | Informal.
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| 17. | Slang. to add alcohol or ether to (a beverage): to needle beer. |
| 18. | to form needles in crystallization. |
| 19. | to work with a needle. |
| 20. | on the needle, Slang. taking drugs by injection, esp. habitually. |
| 21. | the needle, Informal. irritating abuse; teasing; heckling (used esp. in the phrases give someone the needle and get the needle). |

nee·dle (nēd'l) ![]() (click for larger image in new window) n.
v. tr.
To sew or do similar work with a small, slender, sharp-pointed implement. [Middle English nedle, from Old English nǣdl; see (s)nē- in Indo-European roots.] nee'dler n. |
needle
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"To seke out one lyne in all hys bookes wer to go looke a nedle in a meadow." [Thomas More, c.1530]Meaning "piece of magnetized steel in a compass" is from 1375; the surgical instrument so called from 1727; sense of "leaf of a fir or pine tree" first attested 1798. Needlework first attested 1382. Needlepoint "point lace made with the needle" is from 1865. The verb sense of "goad, provoke" is first attested 1881, probably from meaning "haggle in making a bargain" (1812).
needle nee·dle (nēd'l)
n.
A slender, usually sharp-pointed instrument used for puncturing tissues, suturing, or passing a ligature around an artery.
A hollow, slender, sharp-pointed instrument used for injection or aspiration.
needle (nēd'l) Pronunciation Key
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Needle
used only in the proverb, "to pass through a needle's eye" (Matt. 19:24; Mark 10:25; Luke 18:25). Some interpret the expression as referring to the side gate, close to the principal gate, usually called the "eye of a needle" in the East; but it is rather to be taken literally. The Hebrew females were skilled in the use of the needle (Ex. 28:39; 26:36; Judg. 5:30).
needle
In addition to the idiom beginning with needle, also see on pins and needles.