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  2. to move from side to side in an awkward way, sometimes because of nervousness, embarrassment, or pain: Nobody spoke for at least five minutes and Rachel squirmed in her chair with embarrassment. The fish squirmed on the ground for a few moments and then lay still. Synonyms. twist.

  3. The meaning of SQUIRM is to twist about like a worm : fidget. How to use squirm in a sentence.

  4. to move from side to side in an awkward way, sometimes because of nervousness, embarrassment, or pain: Nobody spoke for at least five minutes and Rachel squirmed in her chair with embarrassment. The fish squirmed on the ground for a few moments and then lay still. Synonyms. twist.

  5. verb (used without object) to wriggle or writhe. Synonyms: twist, turn. to feel or display discomfort or distress, as from reproof, embarrassment, pain, etc.: He squirmed under the judge's questioning. noun. the act of squirming; a squirming or wriggling movement. squirm. / skwɜːm / verb. to move with a wriggling motion; writhe.

  6. squirm. (skwɜrm) v.i. 1. to wriggle or writhe. 2. to feel or display discomfort or distress, as from embarrassment or pain. n. 3. the act of squirming; a squirming or wriggling movement. [1685–95; of expressive orig., perhaps echoing worm] squirm′er, n.

  7. If you squirm, you move your body from side to side, usually because you are nervous or uncomfortable. He had squirmed and wriggled and screeched when his father had washed his face. [ VERB ]

  8. To squirm is to wiggle or twist your body, the way an excited puppy will squirm when you try to hold him in your arms.

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