wriggle
English
Etymology
From wrig + -le (frequentative suffix). Compare Dutch wriggelen (“to wriggle, squirm”), Low German wriggeln (“to wriggle”). Related to Old English wrigian (“to turn, wend, hie, go move”), from Proto-Germanic *wrigōną (“to wriggle”).
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪɡəl
Verb
wriggle (third-person singular simple present wriggles, present participle wriggling, simple past and past participle wriggled)
- (intransitive) To twist one's body to and fro with short, writhing motions; to squirm.
- Teachers often lose their patience when children wriggle in their seats.
- Jonathan Swift
- Both he and successors would often wriggle in their seats, as long as the cushion lasted.
- (transitive) To cause to or make something wriggle.
- He was sitting on the lawn, wriggling his toes in the grass.
- (intransitive) To use crooked or devious means.
Translations
to twist one's body and move the limbs
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Translations
wriggling movement
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Anagrams
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