Search results
- Dictionarywiggle/ˈwɪɡl/
verb
- 1. move or cause to move up and down or from side to side with small rapid movements: "Vi wiggled her toes"
noun
- 1. a wiggling movement: "a slight wiggle of the hips"
Powered by Oxford Dictionaries
Wiggle is a verb that means to move up and down or from side to side with small, quick movements, or a noun that means a small, quick movement. Learn how to use wiggle in sentences, see synonyms and related words, and explore translations in different languages.
- English (US)
WIGGLE meaning: 1. to (cause to) move up and down and/or...
- Znaczenie Wiggle, Definicja W Cambridge English Dictionary
wiggle definicja: 1. to (cause to) move up and down and/or...
- Wiggle: Polish Translation
WIGGLE translate: poruszać (się), kręcić. Learn more in the...
- Wiggle: Indonesian Translation
WIGGLE translate: menggoyangkan. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Wiggle: French Translation
wiggle translate: remuer, (se) tortiller, mouvement...
- Wiggle Spanish Translation
WIGGLE translate: mover, moverse, contonear, contonearse,...
- English (US)
Wiggle is a verb that means to move to and fro with quick jerky or shaking motions, or to proceed with or as if with twisting and turning movements. Wiggle is also a noun that means the act of wiggling, or shellfish or fish in cream sauce with peas.
Wiggle definition: to move or go with short, quick, irregular movements from side to side. See examples of WIGGLE used in a sentence.
Wiggle means to move quickly and irregularly from side to side, or to cause something to do the same. It can also mean to squirm, wriggle, or shimmy. See synonyms, translations, and usage examples.
If you wiggle something or if it wiggles, it moves up and down or from side to side in small quick movements.
Definition of wiggle verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
WIGGLE means to move up and down or from side to side in small quick movements. Learn how to use this word in different contexts, such as with fingers, toes, hips, or worms, and see translations in French and Spanish.