Worry unnecessarily or excessively.
1It's possible that one outstanding niggle may resurface; if so, avoid overreacting.
2He felt a niggle of worry every time he thought of her.
3I remembered another niggle-odeon line from an earlier Spithill interview I did.
4Leinster senior coach Stuart Lancaster said: Johnny has a lower-leg niggle.
5However, one small niggle has been thrown up by the event.
6Okay, it did niggle, but it was something I could forget easily enough.
7Which I guess is more of a wish than a niggle.
8But there was still that niggle, that suspicion, that wouldn't entirely go away.
9Then the last thing he said begins to niggle at her wakening brain.
10Trial was OK. Could win on best form but there's a doubt niggle there.
11In a pulsating, physical game with plenty of niggle, North then held their nerve.
12And we still don't know the extent of Flintoff's niggle.
13There was niggle as tensions rose in the second half.
14This was after returning from international duty with a niggle.
15It was tetchy stuff and there was obvious niggle all the way through it.
16He was also everywhere defensively and provided his trademark niggle, picking up four fouls.
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