knee-trembling

English

Adjective

knee-trembling (comparative more knee-trembling, superlative most knee-trembling)

  1. Filled with strong emotion
    1. Terrified.
      • 1991, Gene Lazuta, Bleeder, →ISBN, page 71:
        A terrible, knee-trembling wash of terror ran down his spine as he lifted the gun and pressed its cold metal to his chest.
      • 2001, Colin Evans, Great Feuds in History: Ten of the Liveliest Disputes Ever, →ISBN:
        An example: say Lyndon Baines Johnson had gotten wind that he was being trashed by some Capitol Hill minnow, chances are a single phone call from the Oval Office would have been enough to induce a knee-trembling silence.
      • 2006, Dan Parry, Blackbeard: The Real Pirate of the Caribbean, →ISBN, page 10:
        One ship's captain remembered Blackbeard as 'a tall, spare man' - an unembroidered eye-witness description that supports many knee-trembling references to a giant of a man, a devil in disguise.
      • 2017, Liz Flaherty, The Happiness Pact, →ISBN:
        Her knee-trembling, heart-pounding fear of thunderstorms was no match for her fascination with the light show offered by the sky.
    2. Thrilled.
      • 1994, Susan Connell, Rings on Her Fingers, →ISBN, page 169:
        "I just want to look at you," he said, his blatant stare filling her with knee-trembling excitement.
      • 2006, Isolde Pullum, Brazen Horse, →ISBN, page 68:
        The first said Clare Philips and Magpie, the second, to my knee-trembling delight, said Adam Bray and Custar and the third one we came to said Paula Wilkie and Jazz, so we went in.
    3. Overwhelmed.
      • 1979, Collin Wilcox, Power Plays, →ISBN, page 202:
        Hearing the familiar voice, I felt a sudden rush of stomach-empty, knee-trembling relief.
      • 2007, Kathryn Deans, Glow: Troll's Tale 2: The Continuation of a Troll's Tale, →ISBN:
        Knee-trembling exhaustion. With each step he'd felt like he was fighting gravity just to stay upright and he'd developed a niggling pain in his lower back, the first pain he had experienced in all his very long years.
      • 2009, Robert Kershaw, Tank Men, →ISBN:
        The precursor to advancing across unknown ground was knee-trembling agitation: this may be for the last time.
  2. Causing strong emotion; thrilling.
    1. Very frightening.
      • 1981, Tom Ramsey, 25 Great Australian Golf Courses and how to Play Them, page 161:
        The putting surface, however, has three levels and it can offer a knee-trembling experience where the danger of a three-putt is acute.
      • 2001, Henry Stedman, Trekking in the Dolomites, →ISBN, page 138:
        Where, the purists cry, are the heart-racing climbs and knee-trembling descents for which the Dolomites is justly famed?
    2. Causing a feeling of rapture.
      • 1996, Adrienne Simpson, Opera's farthest frontier, →ISBN:
        Standing near the soloists during a finale was a knee-trembling experience.
      • 2001, Geoffrey Giuliano, Lennon in America: 1971-1980, Based in Part on the Lost Lennon Diaries, →ISBN:
        Things like the consciousness-expanding, life-altering, knee-trembling mind and music of John Winston Ono Lennon.
      • 2014, Cathy Bramley, Conditional Love, →ISBN, page 128:
        Marc flashed me one of his knee-trembling smiles and a minute later we pulled up outside a quaint little pub.
      • 2016, Gwyn Cready, A Novel Seduction, →ISBN:
        It was one thing to accept Axel's friendship, even a friendship with some knee-trembling benefits.
    3. Impressive.
      • 2004, Investors Chronicle, page 65:
        If the trust's assets grow by 5 per cent each year, the redemption yield for capital shareholders will be a knee-trembling 75.9 per cent a year.
      • 2013, Philip Ball, Curiosity: How Science Became Interested in Everything, →ISBN, page vii:
        Not only is it now acceptable to be curious — and this book is largely about how that came to be the case — but it is easier than ever, because of the knee-trembling quantity of information we have at our fingertips.
      • 2014, Jane Costello, The Time of Our Lives, →ISBN, page 55:
        A vast foyer leads to a pool area of knee-trembling tranquillity, an oasis of polished tiles and palm trees arranged in a swaying phalanx around an elegant infinity pool.
  3. Involving a knee-trembler.
    • 2008, Ethan Greenhart, Can I Recycle My Granny?: And 39 Other Eco-Dilemmas, page 167:
      That is definitely better than having them all walking the streets, dropping litter, binge-drinking in pubs, defecating in alleyways, having knee-trembling encounters in skips that frequently result in pregnancy, and so on.
    • 2015, Nick Robinson, Election Notebook:
      Suggestions of a knee-trembling encounter on a snooker table in Bird's gentlemen's club lend the story a Palmerstonesque flavour – legend has it that the Victorian prime minister and old rascal died while potting the balls on the green baize with his maid.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.