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3.1
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pinched adjective [ pɪntʃt ]

• tense and pale from cold, worry, or hunger.
• "her pinched, sallow face"
Similar: strained, stressed, fraught, tense, taut, tired, worn, drained, sapped, wan, peaky, pale, pallid, pasty, pasty-faced, colourless, anaemic, washed out, ashen, ashen-faced, grey, blanched, thin, drawn, haggard, gaunt, wizened, cadaverous, hollow-cheeked, hollow-eyed, emaciated,
Opposite: healthy, glowing, chubby,
• suffering from financial hardship.

pinch verb

• grip (something, typically a person's flesh) tightly and sharply between finger and thumb.
• "she pinched his cheek"
Similar: nip, tweak, squeeze, compress, grasp,
• move one's finger and thumb apart or bring them together on (a touchscreen) in order to zoom into or out of an image, activate a function, etc.
• "to explore in more detail just pinch the screen"
• steal or take without permission.
• "he pinched a handful of sweets"
Similar: steal, thieve, rob, take, snatch, pilfer, purloin, loot, rifle, abscond with, carry off, embezzle, misappropriate, walk off/away with, run away/off with, swipe, nab, rip off, lift, liberate, filch, nick, half-inch, whip, knock off, nobble, bone, heist, glom, snavel, tief, crib, hook,
• live in a frugal way.
• "if I scraped and pinched a bit, I might manage"
Similar: economize, be economical, scrimp, scrimp and save, cut corners, reduce wastage, skimp, stint, be sparing, be frugal, cut back, tighten one's belt, draw in one's horns, retrench, cut expenditure, be niggardly, be tight-fisted, be close, be stingy, be tight, be mingy,
• sail (a boat) so close to the wind that the sails begin to lose power.
Origin: Middle English (as a verb): from an Old Northern French variant of Old French pincier ‘to pinch’.


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