0 present participle of tease --
1 to laugh at someone or say unkind things about them, either because you are joking or because you want to upset that person: --
2 to hold your hair away from your head and brush it towards your head with a comb, in order to make it look thicker --
Experimental studies might be more successful in teasing apart frequency and diversity in noun-type co-occurrence.
Specifically, she points to a gendered practice of teasing.
The former's theoretical position took much posthumous teasing-out by critics to become widely understood.
Improprieties, like teasing, may create and display intimacy between participants engaging in a common form of moderately risky play.
Such teasing episodes are frequent in this friendship group.
By teasing out the discursive significance of thousands of images, the 'pictures cue the argument rather than the other way around'.
He does this by teasing out the connections between miracles and modal intuitions.
Teasing and withholding, veils are the stuff of suspense.