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Synonyms

throbbing

American  
[throb-ing] / ˈθrɒb ɪŋ /

adjective

  1. beating or pulsing rapidly or forcefully, as the heart under the influence of emotion or excitement.

    One may use a sweet, patient tone and words, but the throbbing vein in the temple betrays one’s anger.

  2. feeling or exhibiting strong emotion or passion.

    As he spoke to the students crashing the climate convention, he was clearly thrilled to be there in that throbbing mass of youthful exuberance.

  3. pulsating or vibrating regularly.

    The throbbing sound was now at full volume, and it was indeed drums—deep, heavy goatskin drums.

  4. being or feeling pain that occurs in rhythmic waves or bursts.

    A sinus infection often results in a throbbing headache.

    He pounded on the closed door, but with no effect apart from a throbbing fist.

  5. full of or characterized by lively energy.

    This throbbing metropolis is also the world capital of salsa.


noun

  1. the act of beating fast or forcefully, pulsating or vibrating, or occurring in rhythmic waves.

    The pain in his shoulder had subsided to a dull throbbing.

    Astronomers have measured the throbbing of a sun-like star 24 light-years away.

  2. the act or fact of feeling or exhibiting strong emotion or passion.

    The throbbing of my rage was so powerful that the ground trembled.

  3. lively energy.

    Feel the throbbing of the world’s cultures at the annual international festival this weekend!

Other Word Forms

  • throbbingly adverb
  • unthrobbing adjective

Etymology

Origin of throbbing

First recorded in 1400–50; throb ( def. ) + -ing 2 ( def. ) for the adjective senses; throb ( def. ) + -ing 1 ( def. ) for the noun senses

Explanation

If something's pulsing like a heartbeat, it's throbbing. When you stop and catch your breath after a long run, you might hear your throbbing pulse in your ears. An injury that's throbbing with pain pounds with regular beats: "I have a throbbing headache." Music is often described as throbbing too, beating and pounding with deep bass notes from a club or a car — or maybe your ceiling is vibrating with the throbbing music your upstairs neighbors are playing. To throb is to pulsate, and experts guess the word itself stems from the sound and feeling of pulsating blood.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing throbbing

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Set to a throbbing synth bassline, the song teases fans by interpolating a line from her 1980s classic Into The Groove: "Out here on the dance floor, I feel so free."

From BBC • Apr. 15, 2026

On the second track, “Bumpy,” what sounds like a sonic rendering of an exploding box of crayons leads to a throbbing pulse that could be a sentient computer’s ticking heart.

From The Wall Street Journal • Nov. 18, 2025

But it’s D’Angelo’s soaring vocals that transmute the molten instrumental throbbing into a transcendent buzz, achieved through multi-track vocal layers and a vacillation between climactic reverb roars and serene breaks.

From Salon • Oct. 19, 2025

She knew her throbbing knees and elbows meant fluid was leaking out of her joints.

From Slate • Sep. 9, 2025

Within seconds, the sunlight blurred, filling my vision with a throbbing crimson glow.

From "The City Beautiful" by Aden Polydoros