(Of speech) harsh or hurtful in tone or character.
1Rio Tinto edged higher, hours ahead of its full year results announcement.
2Local medium term wholesale interest rates edged higher after the RBNZ statement.
3Paddy Power also edged up, ahead of the weekend's British Grand National.
4The currency edged lower on Thursday, following weak UK consumer lending data.
5Meanwhile, financial stocks edged higher with losses among insurance stocks limiting gains.
6Conclusion: Registered nurses' job satisfaction could be described as a double-edged sword.
7But big-cap technology shares edged higher, helping Nasdaq to briefly turn positive.
8There they'd seen firsthand the double-edged sword of prejudice: the new apartheid.
9Singapore equities edged higher ahead of July inflation data due on Friday.
10Don't move.' Arms out, Antsy edged his way towards Corien's loud breathing.
11Thai shares edged higher after data showed strong October factory output data.
12London's market fell while Paris flatlined and stocks in Frankfurt edged higher.
13It edged higher for a second session since posting consensus-beating first-quarter profit.
14However, the stronger rand is a double-edged sword for many many farmers.
15She edged around Lorenzo, just in case he decided to come to.
16However, she warns this could be a double edged sword for companies.
Edged per variant geogràfica