Noun
I need a needle and thread to sew the button on your shirt.
The needle on the scale points to 9 grams.
The compass needle points north. Verb
His classmates needled him about his new haircut.
we needled him mercilessly for thinking that he had any chance of being the prom date for the school's most popular girl
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Noun
That means any extra energy used there could be effectively lost in the noise when measuring whole-animal metabolism; in other words, important work may be happening, just not at a scale large enough to move the metabolic needle.—Melissa Cristina Márquez, Forbes.com, 29 Jan. 2026 Adi turned away as the needle found its vein, scanning the other man for a reaction but finding none.—Jonathan Miles, Harpers Magazine, 27 Jan. 2026
Verb
Jake needles Harry about the past 50 years, but Harry can only offer scraps of history.—Randall Colburn, Entertainment Weekly, 13 Jan. 2026 But there are other factors that needled their way into the evolutionary development of dormancy characteristics.—Paul Cappiello, Louisville Courier Journal, 9 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for needle
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English nedle, from Old English nǣdl; akin to Old High German nādala needle, nājan to sew, Latin nēre to spin, Greek nēn
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a