tease
How to Use Tease
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishTo playfully (or annoyingly) provoke someone, or to give a small preview of something.
Teasing can be affectionate or hurtful depending on tone and relationship — worth being clear which you mean.
Word Forms
teased past tense, teases plural, teases singular
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
His friends _____ him good-naturedly about his new haircut.
Etymology
From Old English tæsan, originally meaning to pull apart or comb out fibres (like wool) — the modern sense of playful provocation developed centuries later, by extension from "picking at" someone.