Tickle in a sentence as a noun

It would tickle me if they released HL3 on Linux first.

He had friends, loved ones, and a special someone who made him smile with tickle fights.

When threatened with tickles, she might say "if you tickle me I'll cry rape god dammit!

When you are all command and control this doesn't tickle your pseudo alpha genes.

Would you want to fund a Feynman to tickle his intellectual jollies?

I'm sorry to tickle your confirmation bias, but that's absolute nonsense.

It just seems to me like we programmers as a whole like trivial things and can spend most of our time on them as long as they tickle our analytic bone.

Tickle in a sentence as a verb

"I hope if I am ever confronted with that uneasy tickle in the back of my mind that I could find the fortitude to follow it to its conclusion.

The problem I have with the justice system in cases like this is that there are curious people, they will have, probe, poke, tickle, whatever systems are available.

As a system administrator, what would tickle me would be the ability to freeze the attack surface area of user's machines.

It is undertaken precisely to "tickle intellectual jollies".

> How do you make sure that the academe that is selling their project as 'basic research' isn't just pulling a fast one on you and sucking your funds to tickle their intellectual jollies?what's the difference?

Gosh, perhaps I should just tickle myself!At the abstract level, I find it a bit depressing that the blogosphere seems to be chock full of people who regurgitate common knowledge and attempt to present it as something new.

> How do you make sure that the academe that is selling their project as 'basic research' isn't just pulling a fast one on you and sucking your funds to tickle their intellectual jollies?The term "basic research" refers to the study of fundamental principles.

Tickle definitions

noun

a cutaneous sensation often resulting from light stroking

noun

the act of tickling

See also: tickling titillation

verb

touch (a body part) lightly so as to excite the surface nerves and cause uneasiness, laughter, or spasmodic movements

See also: titillate vellicate

verb

feel sudden intense sensation or emotion; "he was thrilled by the speed and the roar of the engine"

See also: thrill vibrate

verb

touch or stroke lightly; "The grass tickled her calves"