Excellent question. I appreciate that you reject the use of conventional words that indicate a question is to follow, such as "what" or "how." I find them superfluous.
If you feel pain, you feel it in a specific location of your body. Feeling in pain is more general.
Pain? I've never felt pain... but the butterflies? Oh, I've felt those... ;)
Yes, she felt pain.
Puritans refused to celebrate Christmas because they felt it was pagan in origin.
Referred pain, also called reflective pain, is pain perceived at a location other than the site of the painful stimulus. An example is the case of ischemia brought on by a myocardial infarction (heart attack), where pain is often felt in the neck, shoulders, and back rather than in the chest, the site of the injury. The International Association for the Study of Pain, as of 2001, has not officially defined the term; hence several authors have defined the term differently.
When pain receptors in the brain receive messages of pain from the hurt area
The procedure was the worst pain I have ever felt. I am still in pain a week after.
Low back pain is often accompanied by sciatica, which is pain that involves the sciatic nerve and is felt in the lower back, the buttocks, and the backs of the thighs.
There is a nerve which connects all three, so when felt in the heart the signal travels to these other areas
Underneath the sternum (breastbone).
See your doctor.
false