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"gooseflesh" Definitions
  1. a condition in which there are raised spots on your skin because you feel cold, frightened or excited

48 Sentences With "gooseflesh"

How to use gooseflesh in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "gooseflesh" and check conjugation/comparative form for "gooseflesh". Mastering all the usages of "gooseflesh" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Do you really want to be one of the people rubbing your arms to scare off gooseflesh?
Here's the quandary for someone like Hahn: How do you measure either Renteria's gesture or Jirschele's gooseflesh?
Gooseflesh prickled my arms as I swept them down and raised them back up to the night sky.
As she changed into her bikini, she noticed a dusting of gooseflesh on her hip, and another on her arm.
The show keeps reiterating its central premise, without grounding a dark conceit with the details that would give it gooseflesh-and-blood existence.
Yes, it lacks the gooseflesh-raising quotient of earlier versions of the show I've seen (in London in 2004, and on Broadway two years later); its original music (by Ryan Rumery) is strangely sunny; and this version slightly muffs the play's spook-house climax.
It gives me gooseflesh merely to remember the next half-hour.
Quite a little could be said about the creative power of gooseflesh.
The skin all down his back turned there and then into gooseflesh.
His arms suddenly turned to gooseflesh and his heart started to beat faster.
Her arms broke out in gooseflesh and she shivered despite the muggy classroom air.
Her arms broke out into gooseflesh while her toes and fingers clenched in memory.
He knew his power to raise his listener's gooseflesh, and he reveled in it.
A neurotic person with gooseflesh, and teeth a-chatter, trying hard to be brave.
She heard hoofbeats behind her, and gooseflesh broke out all over her naked body.
He sat and looked at us so peculiarly that I got gooseflesh all over.
She shivered again, and rubbed vigorously at the gooseflesh that had risen on her arms.
It was a scent she couldn't recognize, and it made her skin turn into gooseflesh.
I'm sorry that some people will get gooseflesh but it is not me to blame.
It was a high shimmer of sound and it gave him gooseflesh, as it always did.
He felt his throat close up, his heart stop, gooseflesh creep up every inch of his skin.
For God's sake, his teeth are still clattering and he's got gooseflesh up and down his arms!
Trinity gasped as his movement sent shivers up her spine and her arms broke out in gooseflesh.
He reached out and touched my shoulder which created a serious case of gooseflesh up my entire body.
This creates a protuberance on the skin surface, producing the temporarily roughened condition that is popularly called gooseflesh.
There was something so disquietingly familiar about the place that I felt gooseflesh rise on my arms and legs.
The early morning air was dry and warm against his skin, but he still felt gooseflesh rising on his spine.
Her arms broke out in gooseflesh as droplets from the roof slid through the opening and splashed on her skin.
When I caught up to her I touched her arm and could feel the gooseflesh as she shook me loose.
Somewhere in the back of her mind she heard a deep throaty laugh, making her skin break out in gooseflesh.
Arm outstretched upon the table, Briar watched as his wrist bubbled with gooseflesh and a shiver tiptoed along his spine.
I look at his smooth black hair, smooth light-brown skin with no gooseflesh, and the ugly naked wood of his kitchen.
My whole body trembled as I forced the muscles to move, the blood still pounding in my ears and gooseflesh all over.
A painting of an Arctic scene of frost and snow may evoke the sensation of cold or a shiver that produces gooseflesh.
On a cold day gooseflesh may develop, an example of a homeostatic response that is a throwback to mechanisms in lower animals.
The girls competed to expose the most gooseflesh, to totter on the most impossible heels, alongside strutting lads in their untucked, short-sleeved shirts.
We soon saw that it was a poor shelter, and when a woman came along and looked straight at us, we began to get gooseflesh!
First edition Tales of Gooseflesh and Laughter is a collection of science fiction short stories by British writer John Wyndham, published in 1956 by Ballantine Books.
Manifestations of opioid withdrawal are similar to but milder than that of morphine and include lacrimation, rhinorrhea, yawning, sweating, restlessness, dilated pupils, anorexia, gooseflesh, irritability and tremor.
Seemingly knowing she was petrified, he removed his grasp, let his hand slide up her arm to tangle with her hair, and Linden felt gooseflesh prickle her skin.
Traumatic anserine folliculosis is a curious gooseflesh-like follicular hyperkeratosis that may result from persistent pressure and lateral friction of one skin surface against another.James, William; Berger, Timothy; Elston, Dirk (2005). Andrews' Diseases of the Skin: Clinical Dermatology. (10th ed.). Saunders. .
In the Netherlands Tais Teng is best known as a member of the Griezelgenootschap, a group of Dutch horror writers who published a yearbook of horror stories and gave performances and signing sessions for interested fans from 1994 to 2003. Paul van Loon was the chairman. The horror wave was just at her top then, so these were massive happenings, with thousands of participants. The series Gooseflesh of R.L. Stine had the same effect in the English speaking countries.
Writing for Entertainment Weekly, Gregory Kirschling thought that "as a finale, maybe the show lacked a defining happy, warm-gooseflesh moment" but that in comparison to normal episodes, this one was "well above average". To him, Shepherd's speech to Grey before the start of the wedding was the highlight of the episode, explaining he likes to see "these two flailing hot people — he soft, she hard — trade well-turned TV wooing dialogue. It still works; it's still romantic." However, he considered what followed, Grey's non- response, not romantic and though he likes their goo-goo courtship scenes together, he wrote it was time for them to be happy together.
Keratosis pilaris (KP) (also follicular keratosis, lichen pilaris, or colloquially chicken skin) is a common, autosomal dominant, genetic condition of the skin's hair follicles characterized by the appearance of possibly itchy, small, gooseflesh-like bumps, with varying degrees of reddening or inflammation. It most often appears on the outer sides of the upper arms (the forearms can also be affected), thighs, face, back, and buttocks; KP can also occur on the hands, and tops of legs, sides, or any body part except glabrous (hairless) skin (like the palms or soles of feet). Often the lesions can appear on the face, which may be mistaken for acne. There are several types of KP and it has been associated with pregnancy, type 1 diabetes mellitus, obesity, dry skin, allergic diseases (e.g.
He then made his feature directorial debut with Sorum (meaning "gooseflesh" in Korean). About damaged people living in a dilapidated apartment complex (particularly a taxi driver who has an affair with a battered housewife, played by Kim Myung-min and Jang Jin-young), local critics praised Sorum as a stylish, atmospheric, deeply challenging, and intelligently written horror film. Yoon won Best New Director at the Busan Film Critics Awards and the Baeksang Arts Awards, while Sorum won three awards at Fantasporto, including Best Director for Yoon, Best Actress for Jang, and the Special Jury Prize. For his next film, biopic Blue Swallow (2005), Yoon again cast Jang in the leading role as Park Kyung-won, a real- life Korean pioneering female aviator who lived in the 1920s and 1930s (the film is named after Park's beloved biplane).
Anecdotal reports by users of psilocybin mushrooms often describe a marked stimulation of yawning while inebriated, often associated with excess lacrimation (eyes producing tears) and nasal mucosal stimulation, especially while "peaking" (undergoing the most intense portion of the psilocybin experience). While opioids have been demonstrated to reduce this yawning and lacrimation provoked by psilocybin, it is not clear that the same pathways that induce yawning as a symptom of opioid abstinence in habituated users are the mode of action in yawning in mushroom users. While even opioid-dependent users of psilocybin on stable opioid therapy often report yawning and excess lacrimation while undergoing this entheogenic mushroom experience, there are no reports on mushrooms in the literature regarding habituated users experiencing other typical opioid withdrawal symptoms, such as cramping, physical pain, anxiety, gooseflesh, etc. Yawning behavior may be altered as a result of medical issues such as diabetes, stroke, or adrenal conditions.
Upon the film's February 1944 release, Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote that The Uninvited was "as solemnly intent on raising gooseflesh as any ghost-story weirdly told to a group of shivering youngsters around a campfire on a dark and windy night." A review in the Monthly Film Bulletin found the film very good technically with "some beautiful coastal scenery" and attempts at reconstructing a Devon village, as well as "beautiful interiors" of the haunted house. The reviewer concluded, "It remains a question, however, whether such a film should ever be made, producing visual evidence of unexplained occult phenomena which, to say the least, have never yet been photographed." It received critical praise, and the film's cinematographer, Charles Lang, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Black and White Cinematography at the 17th Academy Awards, losing to Joseph LaShelle, who won for his work on Laura.
" Contrasting with Carter's view, Monfette of IGN said that it speedily found itself "mired in the annoying and absurd", adding: "This third season may very well represent a case of over-writing a concept that has, perhaps tragically, run bone-dry on narrative fuel." At the conclusion of season three, Entertainment Weekly Gregory Kirschling said "the show lacked a defining happy, warm-gooseflesh moment", adding that the season "didn't leave you dying for the [next] season premiere". Speaking of the fourth season, Laura Burrows of IGN said the series became "a little more than mediocre, but less than fantastic", adding: "This season proved that even strong chemistry and good acting cannot save a show that suffers from the inevitable recycled plot." In contrast to the moderately negative feedback the third and fourth seasons received, Alan Sepinwall of The Star-Ledger said of the fifth season: "Overall, it feels more like the good old days than Grey's Anatomy has in a long time.

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