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wigging

[ UK /wˈɪɡɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. British slang for a scolding

How To Use wigging In A Sentence

  • We sit swigging the wine with which we are liberally provided, then we disperse.
  • The comedian waited were he was, swigging from his hip flask.
  • A malfunction is being blamed for some callers being able to listen in to other people's calls - and presumably, other people earwigging into their conversations.
  • You ask, what if I had slipped from those Marseilles roofs, and been dashed to pieces on the cruel cobbles, or torn asunder by those ensanguined terrorists?" cries he,, swigging champagne and waving a pudgy finger. Watershed
  • We all went to swim before lunch, rather necessary after swigging Martinis.
  • He was later seen swigging from his hip flask. Times, Sunday Times
  • Forget about grabbing a tallboy and swigging it from a brown paper bag in downtown Doha, Qatar's capital and host of the 2022 World Cup; no booze in public. Alan Black: Budweiser at 106 Degrees Fahreinheit: USA Loses World Cup Bid
  • Spring into spring with this fragrant, grapey, musky muscat with lots of delicious, lively hot-house fruit on the palate and an intriguing smoky finish that was born for warm weather aperitif swigging and spicy oriental fare.
  • One or two were swigging from a whisky bottle. The Sun
  • And behind any club at night you will find gangs of sophisticated and gorgeous thirty-somethings swigging guiltily from an illicit flask of vodka.
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