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All muscled synonyms

musΒ·cle
M m

adj muscled

  • healthy β€” possessing or enjoying good health or a sound and vigorous mentality: a healthy body; a healthy mind.
  • able-bodied β€” An able-bodied person is physically strong and healthy, rather than being weak or having a disability.
  • slim β€” slender, as in girth or form; slight in build or structure.
  • competent β€” Someone who is competent is efficient and effective.
  • robust β€” strong and healthy; hardy; vigorous: a robust young man; a robust faith; a robust mind.
  • strapping β€” powerfully built; robust.
  • toned β€” any sound considered with reference to its quality, pitch, strength, source, etc.: shrill tones.
  • sinewy β€” having strong sinews: a sinewy back.
  • burly β€” A burly man has a broad body and strong muscles.
  • vigorous β€” full of or characterized by vigor: a vigorous effort.
  • sturdy β€” strongly built; stalwart; robust: sturdy young athletes.
  • athletic β€” Athletic means relating to athletes and athletics.
  • powerful β€” physically strong, as a person: a large, powerful athlete.
  • brawny β€” Someone who is brawny is strong and has big muscles.
  • stout β€” bulky in figure; heavily built; corpulent; thickset; fat: She is getting too stout for her dresses. Synonyms: big, rotund, stocky, portly, fleshy. Antonyms: thin, lean, slender, slim; skinny, scrawny.
  • wiry β€” made of wire.

verb muscled

  • lacerate β€” to tear roughly; mangle: The barbed wire lacerated his hands.
  • pummel β€” to beat or thrash with or as if with the fists.
  • drub β€” to beat with a stick or the like; cudgel; flog; thrash.
  • mug β€” a drinking cup, usually cylindrical in shape, having a handle, and often of a heavy substance, as earthenware.
  • bludgeon β€” To bludgeon someone means to hit them several times with a heavy object.
  • trample β€” to tread or step heavily and noisily; stamp.
  • thrash β€” to beat soundly in punishment; flog.
  • molest β€” to bother, interfere with, or annoy.
  • beat up β€” If someone beats a person up, they hit or kick the person many times.
  • rough up β€” having a coarse or uneven surface, as from projections, irregularities, or breaks; not smooth: rough, red hands; a rough road.
  • depress β€” If someone or something depresses you, they make you feel sad and disappointed.
  • force β€” physical power or strength possessed by a living being: He used all his force in opening the window.
  • propel β€” to drive, or cause to move, forward or onward: to propel a boat by rowing.
  • shove β€” to move along by force from behind; push.
  • launch β€” to set (a boat or ship) in the water.
  • bump β€” If you bump into something or someone, you accidentally hit them while you are moving.
  • shift β€” to put (something) aside and replace it by another or others; change or exchange: to shift friends; to shift ideas.
  • move β€” to pass from one place or position to another.
  • drive β€” to send, expel, or otherwise cause to move by force or compulsion: to drive away the flies; to drive back an attacking army; to drive a person to desperation.
  • pressure β€” the exertion of force upon a surface by an object, fluid, etc., in contact with it: the pressure of earth against a wall.
  • accelerate β€” If the process or rate of something accelerates or if something accelerates it, it gets faster and faster.
  • nudge β€” to annoy with persistent complaints, criticisms, or pleas; nag: He was always nudging his son to move to a better neighborhood.
  • pound β€” Archaic. to shut up in or as in a pound; impound; imprison.
  • skin β€” the external covering or integument of an animal body, especially when soft and flexible.
  • whip β€” to beat with a strap, lash, rod, or the like, especially by way of punishment or chastisement; flog; thrash: Criminals used to be whipped for minor offenses.
  • paw β€” father; pa.
  • pelt β€” to attack or assail with repeated blows or with missiles.
  • maltreat β€” to treat or handle badly, cruelly, or roughly; abuse: to maltreat a prisoner.
  • wax β€” a fit of anger; rage.
  • hit β€” to deal a blow or stroke to: Hit the nail with the hammer.
  • beat β€” If you beat someone or something, you hit them very hard.
  • flagellate β€” to whip; scourge; flog; lash.
  • buffet β€” A buffet is a meal of cold food that is displayed on a long table at a party or public occasion. Guests usually serve themselves from the table.
  • hurt β€” to cause bodily injury to; injure: He was badly hurt in the accident.
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