Verb (used without object) : The charms on her bracelet jangle as she moves. From Dictionary.com.
Verb (used with object) : He jangled the pots and pans. ,The loud noise of the motors jangled his nerves. From Dictionary.com.
Pools currently have a point more than Northampton and a better goal difference than both Carlisle and Brighton, but it's a right old nerve-jangler. From Wordnik.com. [TEAMtalk Football News] Reference
Just when you think Hollywood could say no more about crusading journalists and crooked politicians, the juicy nerve-jangler "State of Play" leaves you gasping a big, loud. From Wordnik.com. [CTV News RSS Feed] Reference
He was stripped of his royal offices and pensions, and, bitter humiliation, the laurel, torn from his brow, was placed on the head of that scorned jangler in verse, Shadwell. From Wordnik.com. [Palamon and Arcite] Reference
Just when you think Hollywood could say no more about crusading journalists and crooked politicians, the juicy nerve-jangler 'State of Play' leaves you gasping a big, loud 'Whoa!'. From Wordnik.com. [CTV News RSS Feed] Reference
Therefore, a film like Heidi Maria Faisst's "The Blessing," a Danish nerve-jangler about one woman's postpartum perplexity, comes as something of a relief: if not exactly a revelation, this is still Nordic drama as we hope it'll be, not as stagnant psychological portraiture, but as a searing series of gestures and moments brought to thrilling, immediate life. From Wordnik.com. [indieWIRE News] Reference
A jangler speke of perilous mateere. From Wordnik.com. [The Canterbury Tales] Reference
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