[
US
/ˈfɑndəɫɪŋ, ˈfɑndɫɪŋ/
]
[ UK /fˈɒndlɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /fˈɒndlɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
- affectionate play (or foreplay without contact with the genital organs)
How To Use fondling In A Sentence
- Maybeck was fondling the new battering ram, getting a feel for it like a pitcher with a new glove. THE KILL CLAUSE
- BUTT (who in the cushlows of his goodsforseeking hoarth, ever fondlinger of his pimple spurk, is a niallist of the ninth homestages, the babybell in his baggutstract upper going off allatwanst, begad, lest he should challenge himself, beygoad, till angush). Finnegans Wake
- Chris Matthews, who chose the curiously sweet, rather affectionate word "fondling" to describe Mr. Schwarzenegger's behavior, seemed mostly interested in getting Senator Dianne Feinstein to compare the actor's grotesqueries to Mr. Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky. Eschaton
- In the print version, Anoushka is sitting beside her famous father, fondling the goat.
- Throughout, he narrows his eyes behind bushy eyebrows and slips coins from hand to hand, as if fondling a rosary.
- I looked up to see one of the boys, he was fondling me, touching me and I tried to scream.
- ‘First base’ referred to embracing and kissing; ‘second base’ referred to groping and fondling; ‘third base’ referred to fellatio, usually known in polite conversation by the ambiguous term ‘oral sex’; and ‘home plate’ meant conception-mode intercourse, known familiarly as ‘going all the way.’ GENERATION S.L U.T.
- Eugenia were rivalling each other in fondling the rescued spaniel, and in pouring thanks and praise unlimited upon Edgar. Camilla: or, A Picture of Youth
- Ever after, these persons can handle the most venomous snakes with impunity; can make them come by calling them, have great pleasure in fondling them; and the bite of these persons is poisonous! Life in Mexico, During a Residence of Two Years in That Country
- Any day now we'll be fondling spring carrots and even the first outdoor rhubarb and radishes.