[ UK /wˈɒdə‍l/ ]
[ US /ˈwɑdəɫ/ ]
NOUN
  1. walking with short steps and the weight tilting from one foot to the other
    ducks walk with a waddle
VERB
  1. walk unsteadily
    small children toddle
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How To Use waddle In A Sentence

  • There she goes again with that faith, hope, charity, and creativity twaddle.
  • A huge black beacon waddled along, dragging a reluctant mass of iron at the end of its chain cable, followed by a roughly-built "flatty" and a huge log of silkwood. Confessions of a Beachcomber
  • The toddler waddles freely into a neighbourhood yard.
  • The portly old housekeeper used to play cicerone, but the portly old housekeeper, growing portlier and older every day, got in time quite unable to waddle up and down and pant out gasping explanations to the strangers. The Baronet's Bride
  • No self-indulgent twaddle, no luvvy duvvy waffle, no tedious explaining what we're looking at, no extraneous family members self-aggrandising and hogging the airtime with totally irrelevant bullshit. Update
  • The letter read: Dear Partridge, What you say is absolute twaddle. POLITICAL SUICIDE
  • Who wants to listen to ‘Stairway to Heaven’ for that silly hippies-in-Stonehenge twaddle about bustling hedgerows?
  • If only I could get the newest back-lit, bluetooth, high resolution, 64 Mb turnip twaddler, I wouldn't ever need another gadget. Archive 2005-05-01
  • On July 15, 1874, at the Ackley House stables, Mr. John Waddle offered twelve cows and one bull at public auction, but prices ruled so low that they were soon withdrawn from market.
  • These jokers that have been floating around these boardrooms, they waddle off to their next cup of tea or whatever and that's it.
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