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touch |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Idioms, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.09 sec. |
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touch, tactile sensation received by the skin, enabling the organism to detect objects or substances in contact with the body. End organs (nerve endings) in the skin convey the impression to the brain. Touch sensitivity varies in different parts of the body, depending on the number of end organs present in any one area. The tip of the tongue, lips, and fingertips are three of the most sensitive areas, the back and parts of the limbs the least so. The sense of touch is very closely related to the other four sensations received by the skin: pain, pressure, heat, and cold. There is a specific kind of sensory receptor for each of the five so-called cutaneous senses. For example, light-touch receptors convey only the sensation that an object is in contact with the body, while pressure receptors convey the force, or degree, of contact. The blind learn to read by the Braille system by making use of the sensitivity to touch of the fingertips. touch 1. Rugby Soccer the area outside the touchlines, beyond which the ball is out of play (esp in the phrase in touch) 2. Archaic a. an official stamp on metal indicating standard purity b. the die stamp used to apply this mark 3. a scoring hit in competitive fencing 4. an estimate of the amount of gold in an alloy as obtained by use of a touchstone 5. the technique of fingering a keyboard instrument 6. the quality of the action of a keyboard instrument with regard to the relative ease with which the keys may be depressed 7. Bell-ringing any series of changes where the permutations are fewer in number than for a peal How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | ||
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| Policymakers mulled these options as they weighed whether it was more likely that the economy would slow given the Fed's previous rate increases or whether soaring energy prices might touch off broader inflation. Gibraltar residents know that grocery bags can touch off a monkey stampede, and hotels post signs warning guests to keep their windows shut. That would touch off a costly initiative war with unpredictable results. |
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