ten·sion
(tĕn′shən)n.1. a. The act or process of stretching something tight.
b. The condition of so being stretched; tautness.
2. a. A force tending to stretch or elongate something.
b. A measure of such a force: a tension on the cable of 50 pounds.
3. a. Mental, emotional, or nervous strain: working under great tension to make a deadline.
b. Barely controlled hostility or a strained relationship between people or groups: the dangerous tension between opposing military powers.
4. A balanced relation between strongly opposing elements: "the continuing, and essential, tension between two of the three branches of government, judicial and legislative" (Haynes Johnson).
5. The interplay of conflicting elements in a piece of literature, especially a poem.
6. A device for regulating tautness, especially a device that controls the tautness of thread on a sewing machine or loom.
7. Electricity Voltage or potential; electromotive force.
tr.v. ten·sioned,
ten·sion·ing,
ten·sions To subject to tension; tighten.
[Latin tēnsiō, tēnsiōn-, a stretching out, from tēnsus, past participle of tendere, to stretch; see tense1.]
ten′sion·al adj.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
tension
(ˈtɛnʃən) n1. the act of stretching or the state or degree of being stretched
2. mental or emotional strain; stress
3. a situation or condition of hostility, suspense, or uneasiness
4. (General Physics) physics a force that tends to produce an elongation of a body or structure
5. (General Physics)
physics a. voltage, electromotive force, or potential difference
b. (in combination): high-tension; low-tension.
6. (Mechanical Engineering) a device for regulating the tension in a part, string, thread, etc, as in a sewing machine
7. (Knitting & Sewing) knitting the degree of tightness or looseness with which a person knits
[C16: from Latin tensiō, from tendere to strain]
ˈtensional adj
ˈtensionless adj
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
ten•sion
(ˈtɛn ʃən)
n. 1. the act of stretching or straining.
2. the state of being stretched or strained.
3. mental or emotional strain.
4. intense, suppressed suspense, anxiety, or excitement.
5. a strained relationship between individuals, groups, nations, etc.
6. a. the longitudinal deformation of an elastic body that results in its elongation.
b. the force producing such deformation.
7. electromotive force; potential.
8. a device for extending or maintaining tension, as on material in a loom.
v.t. 9. to subject (a cable, belt, tendon, or the like) to tension.
[1525–35; < Latin
tēnsiō constriction < tend(ere) to stretch (compare
tend1)]
ten′sion•al, adj.
ten′sion•less, adj.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
ten·sion
(tĕn′shən)1. Physics A force that tends to stretch or elongate something.
2. Electricity A difference of electrical potential; voltage: high-tension wires.
The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
tension
- Originally a medical term for the condition of being physically strained.Farlex Trivia Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.
Tension
See Also: ANXIETY, NERVOUSNESS
- Back … tense as a tiger’s —D. H. Lawrence
- Body rigid from shoulder to belly as though he had been stricken with elphantiasis —Kenzaburo Oë
- (There continued to be) a certain strain, like dangerously stretched rubber bands —Thalia Selz
- Feel tension rising off me like a fever —Richard Ford
- Feel the tension coming out of Justin like a fever —Paige Mitchell
- Felt his insides drawn together like the lips of a wound —Helen Hudson
- Felt like a swimmer about to dive —Marguerite Yourcenar
- His solar plexus knotted up like a sea anemone —Ursula Le Guin
- In times of stress I enter into a semicomatose state like an instinct-driven opossum —Leigh Allison Wilson
- My back became like a stick —Natsume Söseki
- My stomach drops as if I’m in a balky elevator —W. P. Kinsella
- (Looked about as) relaxed as a safecracker —Joseph Wambaugh
- Spines … stiffened like pulled twine —Louise Erdrich
- Stiffen like a cat that’s been hit by something —Shirley Ann Grau
- (When I approach you) stiffen like an egg white —Diane Ackerman
- Stiffen like a stump —David Wagoner
- Strung up like a piano wire —Elizabeth Spencer
- (Body) taut like wire —Anaïs Nin
- Tense and careful as a man handling a bomb —Dorothy Canfield Fisher
See Also: CAUTION
- Tense and fluttering like a fish out of water —George Garrett
See Also: TREMBLING
- Tense and still like a figure in a frieze —Ross Macdonald
See Also: IMMOBILITY
- Tense as an animal in fear, ready to snap or go limp beneath its keeper’s grasp —Louise Erdrich
- (I lay) tense as a piano wire —W. P. Kinsella
- Tense as a player on the bench —Maureen Howard, New York Times Magazine, May 25, 1986
- Tense as a thoroughbred at the starting gate —Anon television feature on New York marathoners, November 1, 1986
- Tense as a wound spring —Joseph Heller
- (Voices) tense as barks —Edward Hoagland
- (People were as) tense as fiddle strings —Dorothy Canfield Fisher
- Tense as if my neck were tipped back, my mouth agape, and I was preparing for the dentist’s needle —W. P. Kinsella
- Tense as rectitude —Norman Mailer
- Tension broke like heat after a thunderstorm in a nervous burst of laughter —Lael Tucker Wertenbaker
- Tension ran like a red-hot wire through the men —Marjory Stoneman Douglas
- Tension stretching like taut wires across the room —Ross Macdonald
- Tension … vibrates like a melancholy bell —David K. Shipler, New York Times Book Review, March 1, 1987
- Tight as a duck —Graham Masterton
The simile was found as part of a sex scene. In full context it reads: “With her own fingers, she slipped him inside her, and although she was as tight as a duck, she was also warm and wet and irresistible.”
- (His hand was) tight as a knot —Ann Beattie
- Tight as a man going to the electric chair —Norman Mailer
Mailer before being interviewed by Mike Wallace.
- Tight as a quivering string —David Nevin
- Tight as a sheet on a hospital bed —Anon
- (Throats were) tight as tourniquets —Karl Shapiro
- Tightly controlled … as if he was tied down to his desk by leather straps —Anon White House colleague about Robert McFarlane during the Iran-Contra scandal, quoted in New York Times, March 2, 1987
- (He always came back from the ballfield) turned tighter than the bolts on an automobile tire —Norman Keifetz
The simile from a novel about a baseball player (The Sensation) continues as follows: “By that jack-handle known as ‘being a pro’.”
Similes Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1988 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.