A severe recurring vascular headache; occurs more frequently in women than men.
1Elizabeth had a megrim on the day of Mary's coronation.
2The feeling, megrim or reality, was gone now.
3Not taking on about that silly cup, I hope-no ;whatcan it be then, a megrim?
4Their protest coincided with the closure of prawn, megrim and pollack fisheries because the Irish catch quotas have been filled.
5And intellectually, it would seem to be the result of a bad quarter of an hour of the author: a megrim of the soul.
6We brought them in, not quite so fast, as though some lurking megrim, some microbe of dissatisfaction with ourselves was at work within us.
7I am sick of her megrims and her vapours and her humours.
8The trenches were damp and unhealthy, the intervening years full of megrims.
9How did you manage to clear your head of those confounded megrims?
10Beatrice Coddington had an attack of the megrims and remained in her room.
11You watch a girl who has an attack of the megrims.
12However, I had little enough leisure for personal megrims just then.
13This February gloom is enough to give a man the megrims.
14Then the Governor's lady had desired him to attend her for the megrims.
15He has the gout, and his lady has the megrims.
16Would he not fall in the megrims for that England's honour had been over thrown?