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
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  • 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 John Waddle offered twelve cows and one bull at public auction, but prices ruled so low that they were soon withdrawn from market.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.
  • The turtle waddled down the bank of the slough, out onto a rotten railroad tie through an obstacle course of brambles and beer cans, and, to my surprise, vanished with a wet slap, proving that this water was still alive.
  • So forgive me if I say phooey to the fashionable PR twaddle which claims that casinos can regenerate our urban landscape.
  • Jiro waddled closer, his belly bulging and distended.
  • Just tap the shell to cycle through the four modes: 1) walk and run mode where it will waddle for you; 2) Sing mode where it sings a song; 3) Race mode where it will run as fast as it can signalled by the "pipi" of a whistle) and 4) Rhythm mode where it will walk in a rhythm you create through the tapping of its shell. Mini Robotic Turtle – Calpis Walkie Bits
  • Even hard core escapists are bound to be defeated by the generic tough-guy twaddle and the impersonal action sequences.
  • Perhaps the most intriguing question of all, though, regards the significance of the baby, which lies asleep, or quite possibly dead, swaddled so expertly in the foreground of the picture.
  • One fine morning as he waddled down the chapel steps, his recalcitrant congregation took matters into their own hands, "debagging" the holy hypocrite and attempting "to deprive him of his manhood. Deborah Swiss: The First Female Flash Mob
  • Even newborn babies were not washed, and until the eighteenth century they were swaddled in bands of cloth that were changed twice a day at most.
  • Madame Dort waddled over to the workbench, clanked her toolbox down beside it, flipped the heavy metal latches, and flung the thing open. GuildWars Edge of Destiny
  • He sneers at her approach and waddles forward to block her passage.
  • Both pieces portray the wealthy as guilty, eager to please, easily fleeced babies swaddled by all that money.
  • Never on a lead, it waddles beside him as macho, musclebound and menacing as its scrawny owner aspires to be. Times, Sunday Times
  • Anyway, as the tumbril bearing Grant came into view, and we got shots of toothless crones in the crowd getting on with their knitting – or their modern equivalent, West Ham fans looking glum – the Hammers' latest signing, Wayne Bridge, was demonstrating that even a magic Chris Waddle cheque book might not provide an automatic solution to the club's troubles. Keegle is noble but good taste takes a tumbril | Martin Kelner
  • I'll be hanged, said she," if Sawney Waddle, the pedlar, has not got up in a dream and done it, for I heard him very obstropulous in his sleep, Sure I put a chamberpot under his bed! The Adventures of Roderick Random
  • Waddle, the pedlar, has not got up in a dream and done it, for I heard him very obstropulous in his sleep, Sure I put a chamberpot under his bed! The Adventures of Roderick Random
  • Every teacher or twaddler who denies it or suppresses it, is an enemy of life. The Irrational Knot Being the Second Novel of His Nonage
  • One observer compared his action to a duck waddle.
  • Waddles is a right unpresuming sort of a man in most respects," Evans volunteered as they entered the cookhouse. The Settling of the Sage
  • Once you waddle into those snow pants and head out into that blustery winter weather, you are rolling the dice with your life.
  • They use words like waddle when they want to describe how a stout person walks. LOOKING FOR THE SPARK
  • So I presume the airline will set a weight ceiling and make everyone who waddles up to the check-in counter step on a scale - probably the baggage scale.
  • Now that the main character has a fat belly and can't do anything except waddle around buying baby clothes, the show is guaranteed to be non-stop action and drama.
  • Wherewith the two canons of the old school waddled away, arm in arm, and Bolt put out his head, leered at Ambrose, and bade him shog off, and not come sneaking after other folk's shoes. The Armourer's Prentices
  • Mrs Woodford waddled about in the most valuable shawls; mandarins and josses nodded over her chimneys; and pagodas and japans ornamented her rooms. The Old Manor House
  • There have been some experiments in swaddle-free sleeping, some of which were successful for very brief periods of time (45 minutes! And you thought the pimps had it rough | Her Bad Mother
  • As customers mill about, James waddles up the store's main aisle in search of a white dress shirt for his wedding this Saturday.
  • After the five of us (five people had to be buried in sand) got out, the other four including this 16 yr old girl called shi hua, waddles into the water and washed off their sand covered clothes in the ocean. Cooltwinz Diary Entry
  • But I suspect, some days, that beauty helps protect the spirit of mankind, swaddle it and succor it, so that we might survive. CONFESSIONS OF AN UGLY STEPSISTER
  • The 185 - pound Steller sea lion waddled ashore, shocking students and teachers.
  • There arose from behind some nearby bushes a shrill cachinnation and out waddled a gaggle of purposeful geese. Death of a Fool
  • I'm swaddled in long legged pants to hide the twenty separate bruises.
  • He waddled chubbily and somewhat stiffly, but he outfaced the winter wind as he had not done for many weeks. The Innocents A Story for Lovers
  • Then, one day coincidentally about five years ago, she switched it off halfway through and snarled: ‘What a load of twaddle.’
  • She dismissed the findings as utter twaddle/a load of old twaddle.
  • But while the Earl thus withdrew from public society, it was necessary, at least natural, that he should choose some one with whom to share the solitude of his own apartment; and Mowbray, superior in rank to the half-pay whisky-drinking Captain MacTurk; in dash to Winterblossom, who was broken down, and turned twaddler; and in tact and sense to Sir Bingo Saint Ronan's Well
  • The scene is commonplace enough; twaddle and tea, after tennis; "frivolling" -- it is their word; women too empty-headed and men too tired to do anything else. Appearances Being Notes of Travel
  • He stands up, brushes the dirt from himself, and waddles up to her with a huge grin on his face.
  • This is something that has been the cause of much vile verse in bad poets, of such gruesome twaddle as Senator Vest's dreadful outbark. Plum Pudding Of Divers Ingredients, Discreetly Blended & Seasoned
  • Surely a book's narrative should suffice to make its point, instead of relying on this self-indulgent twaddle?
  • They were good friends beneath all the romantic twaddle, and they could always make each other laugh. ULTIMATE PRIZES
  • And not just any ordinary swaddle - we're talking Miracle Blanket swaddle, which is to say, full-on baby straightjacket. Bustin' loose
  • I waddled jovially around the apartment in my Santa suit, laughing through the beard's tiny mouth hole like a walrus blowing through its moustache.
  • After all, they swaddle your foot in padding to protect you from the unforgiving concrete. You Walk Wrong « Isegoria
  • Of course, it's all wonderfully shabby chic, with several large holes in the carpet and inadvertent additions from the couple's small black pug, which waddles about, snorting and, occasionally, weeing.
  • All the idiosyncrasies for which he was known within his homeland, the hesitant mannerisms and trademark waddle, do not look quite so loveable in the world at large.
  • Please yourself!" the Maluka laughed, and with a flash of white teeth and an infectious chuckle Cheon laughed and nodded back; then, still chuckling, he waddled away to the kitchen and took possession there, while we went to our respective dinners, little guessing that the truest-hearted, most faithful, most loyal old "josser" had waddled into our lives. We of the Never-Never
  • They attempted to stifle their chuckles and hide their amused smiles as Suna moved towards their table in the manner that could only be described as a waddle.
  • I just have enough room to want a little more room. the difference between being swaddle dand being seatbelted. Too Much/Too Little
  • Homes are constructed of waddle and daub (woven sticks and mud) with thatched roofs.
  • The athletic spring that had once been in my step had slid disgracefully into a slothful waddle and I was metamorphosing into a thirty-something marshmallow instead.
  • And he went with a quack and a waddle and a quack in a flurry of eiderdown. Frank Loesser At 100: Celebrating A Broadway Legend
  • Swaddle your newborn baby so that she feels secure.
  • Tiny tots toddled and waddled in memory of a special friend.
  • MacWheep was a "cratur," and much given to twaddle, but when it was his duty once to rebuke a fellow-minister for quarrelling with his people, he was delivered from himself, and spake with such grave wisdom as he has never shown before or since. Kate Carnegie and Those Ministers
  • I sighed as Pitcher waddled along, trailing slightly behind the others sometimes rushing to catch them up.
  • Oh, we must have purchased the wrong swaddler, so I bought another. David Serchuk: Parenting: Everybody Has A Plan
  • Perhaps because they can only waddle from their TV sofa to their car and back again.
  • Namazu squiggled over in his fish-waddle manner.
  • Tell-tale splodges between the fingers, round the ankles and, in a couple of particularly bad cases, down the cleavage suggested that I wasn't the only one aghast at the effects of nine months swaddled in layers of woollies.
  • They usually are swaddled tightly in blankets when they are very small.
  • I waddled jovially around the apartment in my Santa suit, laughing through the beard's tiny mouth hole like a walrus blowing through its moustache.
  • However, that's just a hunch based on the fact that the reported sayings of ETs seem so often to be, well, new age twaddle while their doings seem, so often, to be creepy, meaningless, and malevolent.
  • (The swaddle is E’s big sleep cue) Do you just wait ’til he’s really tired/sleepy/asleep and then put him down that way? ambien Said, A swaddle blog! Now with new footnote action! | Her Bad Mother
  • They were good friends beneath all the romantic twaddle, and they could always make each other laugh. ULTIMATE PRIZES
  • And then as Waddley approached him, Padlin turned and raised the heavy boxwood above his head.
  • The web is spun from dragline silk; other silks are used to make supporting fibres, threads that attach the web to the branch or the rafter, strands to bind prey, strands to swaddle the developing larvae, and so forth.
  • Which nonny wrote this mind-nummy piece of twaddle? In praise of … the graceful retreat | Editorial
  • There's the small head on top of the inflated body - and the waddle.
  • Startled into silence, I watched as it cleaned my cousin in a basin and swaddled her in a cloth before handing her to my father, the Clan's head, waiting outside.
  • Children were swaddled with various methods, depending on the region.
  • She is a vivacious American actress who pulls off portraying anything from menaces to twaddlers, and whose versatility and range have earned her a solid reputation in a business that otherwise focuses on exteriors and beauty in female performers.
  • Oh, yeah, the swaddle is a really important to know how to do a good swaddle is a really important thing. CNN Transcript Aug 9, 2008
  • While our Waddles that's our gee-gee had his meal, A Skipper in the Mercantile Marine
  • Each impossibly soft, downy robe feels like a little chunk of heaven that's so incredibly snuggly that being swaddled in one is like returning to the womb.
  • But technical proficiency does not equal good music, nor does it prevent that music from being boring, from being bloated, self-indulgent twaddle.
  • Well, you might have told me that first instead of bombarding me with all that other twaddle. LADY BE GOOD
  • Swaddle, swaddle, swaddle – the baby loves that feeling, and will absolutely help them sleep better. A Parent is Born « Bored Mommy
  • Most rural and low-income women breastfeed, wrap, and swaddle their babies, sometimes for as long as two years.
  • Of course it doesn't help that a lot of conceptual art is devoid of substance and that those cards are mostly self-serving inane twaddle, but the principle is there.
  • Some penguins waddle along shorelines and ice, whereas others hop from rock to rock.
  • As the bus meanders on, ducks waddle across the golf course and red cows and calves amble along the roads.
  • Hence, when he waddled across the court to and from his old grey pony, he somewhat resembled a turnspit walking upon its hind legs. Waverley
  • Press_, where the peer and the commoner, the priest and the alderman, the friar and the swaddler, [2] can stretch themselves at full length, provided they be not too churlish, let us laugh at those who breed useless quarrels, and set to the world the bright example of toleration and benevolence. Irish Wit and Humor Anecdote Biography of Swift, Curran, O'Leary and O'Connell
  • Even Viktor's stooped, pot-bellied waddle eventually resolves itself into a hearty stride.
  • This new pan-global study of mammals in all their fuzzy variety begins as Attenborough shuffles into the frame of a blinding blue - and-white snowscape, swaddled in an Arctic anorak.
  • The only swaddler that worked for our Houdini was The Miracle Blanket. Not enough coffee in the world.
  • He sneers at her approach and waddles forward to block her passage.
  • It is not unusual, however, to find some person more simpleminded than others, who really believes what the performer says; but such people are indeed simple and foolish to put their faith in such twaddle.
  • So forgive me if I say phooey to the fashionable PR twaddle which claims that casinos can regenerate our urban landscape.
  • Their walk is a waddle, and they bulge with seaming corpulency. CHAPTER XXXV
  • They were good friends beneath all the romantic twaddle, and they could always make each other laugh. ULTIMATE PRIZES
  • Well, you might have told me that first instead of bombarding me with all that other twaddle. LADY BE GOOD
  • We had a walk, or rather a brisk waddle, in the morning, then cold turkey and home-made chutney by the fire for lunch.
  • It is somehow alien to the Eastern mind to practice this totally European thing called chivalry, and in spite of all their twaddle about "Bushido" they do not understand that a prisoner-of-war who is helpless must not be kicked around, must not be outraged, and must be treated generously in consequence. Some Experiences as a Medical Officer with the Royal Army Medical Corps
  • I was about to signal for music when a little six-year-old girl waddled up to me with her yellow sunflower sandals on, and a simple summer outfit, her hair tied up in pigtails.
  • She was nearly as wide as she was tall, and waddled like a duck when she walked.
  • And not just any ordinary swaddle – we’re talking Miracle Blanket swaddle, which is to say, full-on baby straightjacket. Bustin’ loose | Her Bad Mother
  • Waddle is often remembered for his penalty miss in Turin and that criminally overshadows a tremendous performance by the former sausage factory worker in the game.
  • I tuck everything away, his toes, his fingers all swaddled against the wind.
  • By my side, waiting at the next till, was a young woman, bright and bonny, holding a tiny baby in the crook of her arm, all carefully wrapped and swaddled.
  • The only other movie to do that more graphically is "Wall•E," with its extraplanetary leisure world of grotesque waddlers. 'Incendies' Burns With Mystery, Truth
  • Crimson rosellas flutter among the gum trees, while sulphur-crested cockatoos waddle across the lawn, screeching loudly.
  • Peterson, 39, allegedly matched the description of the "" Duck Robber '' (named for his distinctive toe-out waddle) suspected of 15 robberies and a double rape. The Dna Detectives
  • In this form, they manage a penguin-style waddle toward the camera.
  • I waddle around out here, a pale old thing among all these tanned sybarites. 52449_CLARA
  • The letter read: Dear Partridge, What you say is absolute twaddle. POLITICAL SUICIDE
  • Most sleepsacks run about $20 and come in a swaddler version for newborns. Baby shower gift ideas
  • Half a dozen ducks waddled up the bank.
  • For the cynic such talk may seem so much religious twaddle, but for those who really know God, these words are a source of immense comfort.
  • This initially affects the muscles of the buttocks and legs, and causes a characteristic waddle when walking.
  • Padlin looked at Waddley, amazed at the infantile terror palsying his features.
  • If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's not a swan.
  • After a few haymakers, the antagonists waddled off arm in arm to get a little drunker.
  • Jeff Twaddle, 54, a deckhand on the charter boat Gale Force, based out of the Rainbow Marina near the Port of Long Beach, died on a fishing trip Friday after he put the fish in his mouth as a joke for the 20 kids on-board while out on the water, authorities said. 
 Joke Turns Lethal; Angler Chokes On Bait
  • The letter read: Dear Partridge, What you say is absolute twaddle. POLITICAL SUICIDE
  • While they were in that posture, in came a huge Sandal, with a pitchfork in his hand, who used to baste, rib-roast, swaddle, and swinge them well-favouredly, as they said, and in truth treated them after a fashion. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • Babies are swaddled in on their backs on traditional baby boards.
  • I simply swaddle my quart jar in several kitchen towels .
  • I've never heard such utter twaddle!
  • The little alien waddled past Eric and down the alley.
  • I remember being swaddled in blankets, then being swathed with cold washcloths.
  • We are entering a new prudent paradigm, where cautious accounting and sober behaviour will replace the intoxicated entrepreneurialism of the 1990s. All the talk of the digital revolution turned out to be so much twaddle and hype.
  • _tschts_ and _pshaws_ of a little group of his enemies, who lounged on the outside of the crowd to cast ridicule on the "swaddler" and the The Manxman A Novel - 1895
  • Thank you, Greg, for considering my twaddle interesting enough to broadcast.
  • My second reaction was: What a load of self-indulgent twaddle!
  • The elevator doors swung open, and an old lady with a carpet bag waddled out between them.
  • The homers flap about and waddle towards the door.
  • Is this more wanton, say, than to devote weeks to the consideration of the particular way in which your friend Mr. Nash may be most intensely a twaddler and a bore? The Tragic Muse
  • But I suspect, some days, that beauty helps protect the spirit of mankind, swaddle it and succor it, so that we might survive. CONFESSIONS OF AN UGLY STEPSISTER
  • This bill is gobbledygook; it is twaddle; it is rubbish.
  • The process seems to have been finalised a few weeks ago and swaddled in the utmost secrecy.
  • The exceptions are only Patriot batteries, ammunition and underwing ordnance. so "Derek Blades", you are talking twaddle. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • Every baby I would swaddle would end up busting out of his bundle and crying his damn little head off, limbs flailing and clawing at the air.
  • Close man-made cropland a few that years to be built simply greatly mad, violate on the mother that carrying swaddle on the back also idle does not live, also ground of travel day and night works.
  • I'm glad to hear that about O'Brien; as both a Catholic and a long-time fan of fantasy/horror/SF, I get twitchy when I hear objections along the lines of "escapist twaddle" or "it's not like reading the KJV!!!" to the genre. You Go, Greydanus, or, O'Brien and the Dragon
  • The usual uninspired marketing twaddle is neither. Back label watch: “handcrafted” | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • Young kids, apple-cheeked and swaddled in ski gear, snowplowed their way down beginner runs, giving their parents high-fives at the bottom. Denver Post: News: Breaking: Local
  • There's nothing terrible about twaddlers - they're just beginning to test their independence, influence and control.
  • There's a Minister for Global Health out there somewhere and it seems that if you write beyond your allocation of tripe and twaddle, he or she will take retribution.
  • She won't be sleeping in a swaddler, your bed, etc. her whole life. Of Socrates and sleep
  • An old lady with a roly-poly figure waddled her way over to me and gave me a friendly smile.
  • ducks walk with a waddle
  • It's not only humans who appreciate the food at this pink-washed cottage opposite Danbury's duck pond - the ducks waddle over for any leftovers.
  • Infants used to be swaddled at birth and are still wrapped and bundled tightly except during bathing and diapering.
  • Sweet, sweet the swaddle is that guarantees the sleep … A swaddle blog! Now with new footnote action! | Her Bad Mother
  • I waddled over to the chair and managed to sit myself down.
  • For they say, "'Our life's but a span; '[37] we can only live once; why should you heed your father's threats? he's an old twaddler, he has one foot in the grave; we shall soon hoist him up and carry him off to burial. Plutarch's Morals
  • His eyes widened as she unwrapped the sword from the black cloth she had swaddled it in.
  • Then, at the next hole, a duck waddled onto the green just as Love was lining up a putt.
  • The fubsy man waddled forward, nearly half the height of the beautiful woman, and merely stared at the stranger who seemed to be seven feet tall.
  • Lastly , pull the lower corner up to tuck it under babys chin to complete a secure swaddle .
  • They're raised with enough clearance so the penguins can waddle under them on the way to their burrows.
  • Over an aching vocal performance, Tipton swaddles Nilsson all in bells, oboes, glockenspiels, blurted brass, pizzicato'd violins, and xylophones, bidding an elongated adieu to pop's previously ornate design.
  • Such twaddle is outmoded and a sure formula for disappointment.
  • It waddled towards the pool, looking less like a predator than like an elderly sumo wrestler tottering uncertainly towards a bout with a reigning champion.
  • Two large white geese waddled across our path in leisurely fashion.
  • Amid these twaddlers he presents the formidable front of a man with meaning, confident of his cause, and devoted to it with all his faculty.
  • Where's this self indulgent, meandering twaddle going, I hear you cry, if indeed you're still reading.
  • On a transparent blue expanse, a swaddled figure lies in a passive curve, suspended in a heavenly hammock of spidery filaments, surrendered to the life of the mind.
  • Some are good, some not so good and some are utter twaddle.
  • I should, however, feel inclined to forgive much of his extraordinary romancing for the admirable manner in which he settled that chattering twaddler, Bishop Burnet: Notes and Queries, Number 183, April 30, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc
  • For such views or criticisms, which are not based on thorough investigation, are nothing but ignorant twaddle.
  • A short and rotund figure waddled onto the stage.
  • He walked, well I'd like to say walked but it was more of a waddle, to the door and turned the shiny brass doorknob.
  • Twiddle-dee is dumb twaddle-dee is sound when the muse is glum so twaddle till you're numb and the muse will come. Twaddle is Good Too!
  • The second frogman waddled towards the farther side of the sandbank -- THE LAST RAVEN
  • In a recent letter to the South Manchester Reporter the author Cath Stanicliffe claimed that she knew instantly that the Christie claim was "twaddle". John Leech Nailed, Again: More Good News for Christie
  • Others waddled, Dominic Cork bustled, Richard Ellison scampered, Derek Pringle pranced doing a kind of human dressage, and the more rotund were as chest-on as an old maid breasting the billows off Cromer beach in early spring. Praveen Kumar's rare style of swing bowling is as bold as it is old | Rob Bagchi
  • It is rather a celebration of birds in flight (or in waddle, in the case of the flightless penguins), as close to their majestic surroundings as possible.
  • Yes, it was full of platitudes, buzz-words, admin-speak and woolly bureaucratic twaddle, but in its own earnest way, it was an attempt to take the cultural health of the nation seriously.
  • No, it's twaddle. There's no way that shaving can stimulate the hair roots to work harder.
  • Well, you might have told me that first instead of bombarding me with all that other twaddle. LADY BE GOOD
  • Knock, knock - is there anyone there who believes this twaddle?
  • Where's this self indulgent, meandering twaddle going, I hear you cry, if indeed you're still reading.
  • swaddled the infant
  • *** Schauspieler waddles off to do some work stuff crataegus > goddammit, in seconds, someone took schazzy's name. bozino > tweet tweet biiitch crataegus > ah, they already had it but were hidden crataegus > Isn't an acting resume supposed to list the roles you've played instead of the movies, director, and studio? Linkfilter.net - fresh links
  • Tiny fairy penguins body-surf onto the beach, struggle to their feet, and waddle up to their custom-made nesting shelters.
  • Russ waddled in a feeble stride as the daughter strutted with a youthful arrogance.
  • The Osbert Village Inn and Tavern was a waddle and daub building, like most of Osbert.
  • This country, you may have noticed, is rife with such narrow-brained twaddlers.
  • 5 Of course, determining that a set of assertions is not scientific is not necessarily to "stigmatize" those assertions, but simply to understand their nature; it's not stigmatizing a duck to say that if it quacks and waddles and has feathers, it's a duck. The Panda's Thumb: October 2005 Archives
  • They watched in silence as a pair of ducks waddled across the lawn and waded into the pond.
  • He had pushed himself upright and waddled all the way across the floor to the credenza then seemed to run out of ideas where to go.
  • My prejudiced systematics lumps them with dodos, on the far side of things: they are primitives, throwbacks, dead ends, clumsies, shufflers and waddlers, kickers and swimmers, not flyers. A Year on the Wing
  • Office Pike there's a Dickensian name for a thug cop, isn't it? waddled down the line of unresisting students and carefully sprayed an agonizing, blistering bio-weapon all over them. Doug Molitor: 12 Ways to Tell Occupy Wall St From the Tea Party (Doug's Dozen VIDEO)
  • I have heard some of them talk vigorous sense — yea, I have been present at polyglot discussions in the old, oak-lined dining-room at Hunsden Wood, where a singular insight was given of the sentiments entertained by resolute minds respecting old northern despotisms, and old southern superstitions: also, I have heard much twaddle, enounced chiefly in The Professor, by Charlotte Bronte
  • Walking is starting to have a slight waddle quality to it.
  • It often reminded me of modern _bassi-rilievi_ and portrait statues, in which gentlemen looking sideways with very modern faces, and both hands full of swords, pens, or books, stand impotently swaddled up in ancient togas or the folds of similar enormous cloaks. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 22, August, 1859
  • But the very fact that Time can relay such religiose twaddle without blushing or gagging is proof of how far the so-called Mainstream Media -- or M$M, as I've seen it abbreviated on certain blog-warrior sites -- has slid, or as Dizzy Dead would say, slud. "What kind of a maniac puts eagles in a Christmas tree?": James Wolcott
  • Perhaps Krishnan senior's ponderous waddle on the court could be excused.

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