prick
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
prick/prɪk/
▶verb
- 1 press briefly or puncture with a sharp point.
■ (prick something out) draw or decorate by making small holes in a surface.
- 2 feel a sensation as though a sharp point were sticking into one.
■ cause mental or emotional discomfort to.
- 3 (often prick up) (chiefly of a horse or dog) make (the ears) stand erect when on the alert.
- 4 (prick something out) plant seedlings in small holes made in the earth.
- 1 an act of pricking something.
■ a small hole or mark made by pricking.
- 2 a sharp pain caused by being pierced with a fine point.
■ a sudden feeling of distress, anxiety, etc.
■ archaic a goad for oxen.
- 3 vulgar slang a man's penis.
■ a stupid, unpleasant, or contemptible man.
– phrases
kick against the pricks hurt oneself by persisting in useless resistance or protest. [with biblical allusion to Acts 9:5.]
kick against the pricks hurt oneself by persisting in useless resistance or protest. [with biblical allusion to Acts 9:5.]
– derivatives
pricker noun.
pricker noun.
– origin OE pricca (n.), prician (v.), prob. of W. Gmc origin.
'prick' also found in these Oxford entries:

