Angered or irritated - referring to the stress so placed on the angered person.
It's often used to describe the effects of mischievous pranks or teasing rather than wilfully destructive misbehaviour: "That April Fool joke really had him wound up till he realised the date!"
The idiom "wound up" has 3 distinct meanings:1. (adj) excited, or needing to release tension (He was all wound up before the game)2. (verb) finally did something (I wound up running away.)3. (verb) arrived at a destination or location (We wound up in Miami.)
The likely term is the phrase "wrapped up" (finished, or literally wrapped, as with a gift).The idiomatic use is to mean absorbed, preoccupied, e.g. wrapped up in his work.
Meaning 1: blood, slaughter, bloodshed, carnage, butchery Meaning 2: pierce, wound, transfix, impale
Slang wise to get stitched up or to stitch up someone else is to betray or cheat them in a prearranged or clandestine manner. It is also a reference to the receipt of sutures to close a wound, typically a laceration or avulsion.
Wound. As in you wound something around (coiled), or you received a wound (an injury.)
I wound my self up when I as skipping with my friends All the girls wound up for a fight.
Laceration repair means suturing of a wound.
The word "wound" has more than one definition, and can be pronounced differently. So, wound, meaning a cut or abrasion on your body, rhymes with mooned or swooned. But wound, meaning wrapped around, rhymes with found, bound, hound, mound, etc.
The idiom "wound up" has 3 distinct meanings:1. (adj) excited, or needing to release tension (He was all wound up before the game)2. (verb) finally did something (I wound up running away.)3. (verb) arrived at a destination or location (We wound up in Miami.)
If the subsidiary is a partnership, then it will wound up. otherwise like any other propert it has to be sold out.
Approximation means bringing together, such as the opposite edges of a wound.
wounded wound is also the past tense of wind, as in "I wound up the rope."
TRAUMA
A spring, for example, in watches that are wound up.A spring, for example, in watches that are wound up.A spring, for example, in watches that are wound up.A spring, for example, in watches that are wound up.
Wound means to inflict and injury on someone or to have an injury to living tissue caused by a cut or other impact.
The wound was very deep. Wound spread quickly and infested.
Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.Julius Caesar was the member of the first triumvirate who wound up as the supreme ruler of Rome.