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wriggle
[ rig-uhl ]
verb (used without object)
- to twist to and fro; writhe; squirm.
- to move along by twisting and turning the body, as a worm or snake.
- to make one's way by shifts or expedients (often followed by out ):
to wriggle out of a difficulty.
verb (used with object)
- to cause to wriggle:
to wriggle one's hips.
- to bring, get, make, etc., by wriggling:
to wriggle one's way through a narrow opening.
noun
- act of wriggling; a wriggling movement.
wriggle
/ ˈrɪɡəl /
verb
- to make or cause to make twisting movements
- intr to progress by twisting and turning
- intr; foll by into or out of to manoeuvre oneself by clever or devious means
wriggle out of an embarrassing situation
noun
- a wriggling movement or action
- a sinuous marking or course
Derived Forms
- ˈwriggler, noun
- ˈwriggly, adjective
Other Words From
- wriggling·ly adverb
- outwriggle verb (used with object) outwriggled outwriggling
- un·wriggled adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of wriggle1
Example Sentences
England have not left themselves any wriggle room though.
“And now you want to wriggle out of it and inconvenience all these people. It just gets you off the hook with your problem killing fish.”
It is another excruciating interview, with an embarrassed Prince Andrew needing money and a tough, exploitative Epstein, played by John Hopkins, making him wriggle on his financial hook.
So why should the players allow DraftKings to wriggle off the hook?
You can often find me yelling through the screen at gumshoes who, alone with a killer, announce that they know what they did and how they did and therefore must wriggle out of danger one more time.
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