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dawdle
[ dawd-l ]
verb (used without object)
- to waste time; idle; trifle; loiter:
Stop dawdling and help me with these packages!
- to move slowly, languidly, or dilatorily; saunter.
dawdle
/ ˈdɔːdəl /
verb
- intr to be slow or lag behind
- whentr, often foll by away to waste (time); trifle
Derived Forms
- ˈdawdlingly, adverb
- ˈdawdler, noun
Other Words From
- dawdler noun
- dawdling·ly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of dawdle1
Word History and Origins
Origin of dawdle1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
In thus dawdling away their time they show a strange inconsistency – at one and the same time loving indolence and hating peace.
On Saturday, we continued to dawdle, weather-wise, through October.
Weyman’s cloak-and-rapier swashbuckler is long — over 400 pages in my edition — but its action never dawdles.
Many Republicans, meanwhile, seem perfectly open to dawdling on the legislation despite the critical support it would provide to many people currently in need.
I wandered on down the corridor to the elevator, to dawdle and not run into coarrivals.
Why should they not dawdle at their labor sitting upon the fence in endless colloquy while the harvest rots upon the stalk?
After a big fit of work, I can dawdle against any one; then I get another fit of work—it's like appetite.
You've no idea how beastly it is to dawdle about in a crowd of people, and then at the end go back to another term of school.
Tell your mother, and that poor dawdle there, your sister, that they 'd be thankful they'd have followed my advice.
They watched him as he passed up the pathway, with a stride and a swing so different from his ordinary listless dawdle.
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