[
US
/ˈtɪdɫiwɪŋks, ˈtɪdɫɪwɪŋks/
]
[ UK /tˈɪdlɪwˌɪŋks/ ]
[ UK /tˈɪdlɪwˌɪŋks/ ]
NOUN
- a game in which players try to flip plastic disks into a cup by pressing them on the side sharply with a larger disk
How To Use tiddlywinks In A Sentence
- I picked up a few bumps and bruises but we are not playing tiddlywinks.
- He added: ‘Away from home, we can't even win a game of tiddlywinks, never mind a game of football!
- Four years after graduating from MIT, Frank Shapiro had taken some time off from Harvard Law School when he rejoined the then-famous MIT Tiddlywinks Team and decided the game needed an official historian and lexicologist. Technology Review RSS Feeds
- It might as well be the proverbial tiddlywinks, or as so deliciously happened when one of our own swept up the world title at that most athletic of English indoor sports - darts.
- Continuing from Gonzo's piece here, I thought I'd note Mark Devenport's article on Northern Ireland's national sport, and I'm not talking football, rugby, Gaelic or even tiddlywinks.
- Engagement in a life of tiddlywinks does not rise to the level of a meaningful life, no matter how gripped one might be by the game.
- We think this could improve your performance in everything from tiddlywinks to weightlifting if you do it right.
- They needn't think because they have banned us that we are going to go away and play tiddlywinks.
- As Sir Alex Ferguson said this week: ‘If we were playing them at tiddlywinks it would still be a great competition’.
- One shouldn't expect equal access to everything - I certainly don't - and there are private members' clubs covering everything from underwater basket-weaving to tiddlywinks.