(tizzy)
61send (someone) into a tizz — send/throw (someone) into a tizz/tizzy informal to make someone very upset, excited, or confused. The idea of producing a meal for fifty people threw her into a tizzy …
62throw (someone) into a tizz — send/throw (someone) into a tizz/tizzy informal to make someone very upset, excited, or confused. The idea of producing a meal for fifty people threw her into a tizzy …
63fluster — 1. verb she was flustered by his presence Syn: unsettle, make nervous, unnerve, agitate, ruffle, upset, bother, put on edge, disquiet, disturb, worry, perturb, disconcert, confuse, throw off balance, confound; informal rattle, faze, put …
64twitter — v 1. trill, warble, whistle, sing; chirp, chirrup, tweet, cheep, peep; shrill, stridulate, crow, caw, coo. 2. chatter, jabber, prattle, cackle, gibber, Sl. gibber jabber; babble, prate, twaddle, Brit. twattle, patter, gabble; chit chat, chitter… …
65tizz — /tɪz / (say tiz) Colloquial –noun 1. frantic but ineffectual activity; commotion. –phrase 2. in a tizz, in a state of somewhat hysterical confusion and anxiety: don t get in a tizz. Also, tizzy. {shortened form of tizzy} …
66Tester — Tes ter, n. [For testern, teston, fr. F. teston, fr. OF. teste the head, the head of the king being impressed upon the coin. See {Tester} a covering, and cf. {Testone}, {Testoon}.] An old French silver coin, originally of the value of about… …
67teston — Tester Tes ter, n. [For testern, teston, fr. F. teston, fr. OF. teste the head, the head of the king being impressed upon the coin. See {Tester} a covering, and cf. {Testone}, {Testoon}.] An old French silver coin, originally of the value of… …
68flap — I. noun Etymology: Middle English flappe Date: 14th century 1. a stroke with something broad ; slap 2. obsolete something broad and flat used for striking 3. something that is broad, limber, or flat and usually thin and that hangs loose or… …
69Cryptic crossword — Cryptic crosswords are crossword puzzles in which each clue is a word puzzle in and of itself. Cryptic crosswords are particularly popular in the United Kingdom, where they originated, Ireland, the Netherlands, and in several Commonwealth nations …
70Howdy Doody — Genre Children s television series Created by E. Roger Muir …