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Constriction   /kənstrˈɪkʃən/   Listen
Constriction

noun
1.
A narrowing that reduces the flow through a channel.  Synonyms: bottleneck, chokepoint.
2.
Tight or narrow compression.  Synonym: coarctation.
3.
A tight feeling in some part of the body.  Synonym: tightness.  "She felt an alarming tightness in her chest" , "Emotion caused a constriction of his throat"
4.
The action or process of compressing.



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"Constriction" Quotes from Famous Books



... in which there is no visible constriction between head and prothorax: Rhynchophora ...
— Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology • John. B. Smith

... a powerful revulsion took place in Morton's mind, and with a painful constriction in his throat he bowed to the silent girl, and with an inconsistency which he would not have published to the world, he prayed that something might happen—not to demonstrate the return of the dead but to prove ...
— The Tyranny of the Dark • Hamlin Garland

... appears evident to me that the motion of the heart consists in a certain universal tension—both contraction in the line of its fibres, and constriction in every sense. It becomes erect, hard, and of diminished size during its action; the motion is plainly of the same nature as that of the muscles when they contract in the line of their sinews and fibres; ...
— The Harvard Classics Volume 38 - Scientific Papers (Physiology, Medicine, Surgery, Geology) • Various

... loudly laughing group, Glenfernie with a painter of landscape, Deschamps, and an Oriental, member of some mission to the West. Meeting so, they stopped short. Their nostrils dilated, there seemed to come a stirring over their bodies. Inwardly they felt a painful constriction, a contraction to something hard, intent, and fanged. This was the more strongly felt by Alexander, but Ian felt it, too. Did Glenfernie mean to dog him through life—think that he would be let to do so? Alone in a forest, very far back, they might, at this point, have flown at each other's throat. ...
— Foes • Mary Johnston

... hernia, obstruction, and other causes. Physiologists, it would appear, have never busied themselves to find an explanation for this apparent breach of the laws of gravity. The intestinal canal is a tube with various dilatations and constrictions, but at no spot except the pylorus does the constriction completely obliterate the lumen of the tube, and here only periodically. It is perfectly evident, then, that, unless some system of trap exists in the canal, gases are free to travel from below upward in obedience to the laws of gravity, and would, as a ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 613, October 1, 1887 • Various


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