0 past simple and past participle of tickle --
1 to touch someone lightly with your fingers, making them slightly uncomfortable and often making them laugh: --
2 If something tickles you, you find it funny or it makes you happy: --
The young girl's peachy cheek must have been tickled with a stiff whisker, for the growth of which she was herself responsible.
Rats emit short, high frequency, ultrasonic, vocalizations during purportedly pleasurable experiences such as rough-and-tumble play, before receiving morphine, during mating, and when tickled.
Runs did not flow; they were grafted from a pitch which kept the batsman hopping around as delivery after delivery tickled their ribs.
So employers now have to be tickled.
It tickled my fancy very much.
That tickled them to death.
My constituents have told me that they have difficulty keeping up with price rises every week, but prices being tickled up daily is news to me.
They have been tickled to think that they did the directing, and, above all, that the other person did not know they were blind.