thorn

[ thawrn ]
/ θɔrn /

noun

a sharp excrescence on a plant, especially a sharp-pointed aborted branch; spine; prickle.
any of various thorny shrubs or trees, especially the hawthorns belonging to the genus Crataegus, of the rose family.
the wood of any of these trees.
a runic character (þ), borrowed into the Latin alphabet and representing the initial th sounds in thin and they in Old English, or thin in modern Icelandic.
something that wounds, annoys, or causes discomfort.

verb (used with object)

to prick with a thorn; vex.

Idioms for thorn

    thorn in one's side/flesh, a source of continual irritation or suffering: That child is a thorn in the teacher's side.

Origin of thorn

before 900; Middle English (noun), Old English; cognate with Dutch doorn, German Dorn, Old Norse thorn, Gothic thaurnus

OTHER WORDS FROM thorn

thorn·less, adjective thorn·like, adjective un·thorn, verb (used with object)

British Dictionary definitions for thorn in one's flesh (1 of 2)

Thorn
/ (toːrn) /

noun

the German name for Toruń

British Dictionary definitions for thorn in one's flesh (2 of 2)

thorn
/ (θɔːn) /

noun

Derived forms of thorn

thornless, adjective

Word Origin for thorn

Old English; related to Old High German dorn, Old Norse thorn

Scientific definitions for thorn in one's flesh

thorn
[ thôrn ]

A short, hard, pointed part of a stem or branch of a woody plant. Compare spine.

Idioms and Phrases with thorn in one's flesh

thorn in one's flesh

Also, thorn in one's side. A constant source of irritation, as in Paul's complaining and whining are a thorn in my flesh, or Mother's always comparing us children—it's a thorn in our sides. This metaphoric expression appears twice in the Bible. In Judges 2:3 it is enemies that “shall be as thorns in your sides”; in II Corinthians 12:7 Paul says his infirmities are “given to me a thorn in the flesh.”