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Definition of muscle noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

muscle

noun
 
/ˈmʌsl/
 
/ˈmʌsl/
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  1. [countable, uncountable] a piece of body tissue that you make tight and relax in order to move a particular part of the body; the tissue that forms the muscles of the body
    • a calf/neck/thigh muscle
    • All of this put strain on the heart muscle.
    • to pull/tear/strain a muscle
    • He poses and flexes his muscles in the mirror.
    • This exercise will work the muscles of the lower back.
    • Contract and relax the muscles in your fingers a few times.
    • She tried to relax her tense muscles.
    • He felt every muscle in his body tighten.
    • He didn't move a muscle (= stood completely still).
    • Lift weights to build muscle.
    • muscle fibre/tissue/mass
    see also abductor (2), adductor, ciliary muscle, extensor, flexor, gluteus, skeletal muscle, smooth muscle
    Homophones muscle | musselmuscle   mussel
     
    /ˈmʌsl/
     
    /ˈmʌsl/
    • muscle noun
      • You should stretch before exercise to avoid muscle injuries.
    • muscle verb
      • Don't let that bully muscle in on your success!
    • mussel noun
      • Grandad's mussel linguine recipe was absolutely mouth-watering.
    Collocations InjuriesInjuriesBeing injured
    • have a fall/​an injury
    • receive/​suffer/​sustain a serious injury/​a hairline fracture/(especially British English) whiplash/​a gunshot wound
    • hurt/​injure your ankle/​back/​leg
    • damage the brain/​an ankle ligament/​your liver/​the optic nerve/​the skin
    • pull/​strain/​tear a hamstring/​ligament/​muscle/​tendon
    • sprain/​twist your ankle/​wrist
    • break a bone/​your collarbone/​your leg/​three ribs
    • fracture/​crack your skull
    • break/​chip/​knock out/​lose a tooth
    • burst/​perforate your eardrum
    • dislocate your finger/​hip/​jaw/​shoulder
    • bruise/​cut/​graze your arm/​knee/​shoulder
    • burn/​scald yourself/​your tongue
    • bang/​bump/​hit/ (informal) bash your elbow/​head/​knee (on/​against something)
    Treating injuries
    • treat somebody for burns/​a head injury/​a stab wound
    • examine/​clean/​dress/​bandage/​treat a bullet wound
    • repair a damaged/​torn ligament/​tendon/​cartilage
    • amputate/​cut off an arm/​a finger/​a foot/​a leg/​a limb
    • put on/ (formal) apply/​take off (especially North American English) a Band-Aid™/(British English) a plaster/​a bandage
    • need/​require/​put in/ (especially British English) have (out)/ (North American English) get (out) stitches
    • put on/​rub on/ (formal) apply cream/​ointment/​lotion
    • have/​receive/​undergo (British English) physiotherapy/(North American English) physical therapy
    Extra Examples
    • The disease puts strain on the heart muscle.
    • His muscles rippled beneath his T-shirt as he worked.
    • I laughed so hard I almost pulled a muscle.
    • I walked up and down the aisle to stretch my cramped muscles.
    • Learn how to relax tense muscles.
    • Lifting weights sculpts muscle.
    • Suddenly my sore muscles protested and I let out a groan.
    • The muscles in my face tensed.
    • diet supplements to build muscle
    • the muscles controlling speech production
    Topics Bodyb1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • hard
    • powerful
    • strong
    verb + muscle
    • clench
    • contract
    • flex
    muscle + verb
    • ache
    • burn
    • hurt
    muscle + noun
    • cell
    • fibre/​fiber
    • tissue
    preposition
    • muscle in
    See full entry
  2. [uncountable] physical strength
    • He's an intelligent player but lacks the muscle of older competitors.
    • I exerted every ounce of my miserable muscle power.
  3. [uncountable] the power and influence to make others do what you want
    • to exercise political/industrial/financial muscle
    • The countries tried to flex their collective muscle.
    • This show gives the artist the chance to flex his creative muscle.
  4. Word Originlate Middle English: from French, from Latin musculus, diminutive of mus ‘mouse’ (some muscles being thought to be mouse-like in form).
See muscle in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee muscle in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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