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  1. Dictionary
    wiggle
    /ˈwɪɡl/

    verb

    • 1. move or cause to move up and down or from side to side with small rapid movements: "Vi wiggled her toes"

    noun

    • 1. a wiggling movement: "a slight wiggle of the hips"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. How to use wiggle in a sentence. to move to and fro with quick jerky or shaking motions : jiggle; to proceed with or as if with twisting and turning movements : wriggle… See the full definition

  3. WIGGLE definition: 1. to (cause to) move up and down and/or from side to side with small, quick movements: 2. a…. Learn more.

  4. If you wiggle something or if it wiggles, it moves up and down or from side to side in small quick movements.

  5. Wiggle definition: to move or go with short, quick, irregular movements from side to side. See examples of WIGGLE used in a sentence.

  6. To wiggle is to move something back and forth. When you dance, you probably wiggle your hips. If you wiggle them too much, your mother might wiggle a finger at you and say "Settle down!" Young children wiggle loose teeth until they fall out.

  7. to move from side to side or up and down in short, quick movements; to make something move in this way synonym wriggle. Her bottom wiggled as she walked past. wiggle something He removed his shoes and wiggled his toes.

  8. A complete guide to the word "WIGGLE": definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  9. WIGGLE definition: to make small movements from side to side or to make something else move from side to side: . Learn more.

  10. 1. To move back and forth with quick irregular motions: The gelatin wiggled on the plate. 2. a. To move or proceed with a twisting or turning motion; wriggle: wiggled restlessly in her chair; wiggled through the crowd. b. To insinuate or extricate oneself by sly or subtle means: wiggled out of a social engagement. v.tr. 1.

  11. Wiggle Definition. To move back and forth with quick irregular motions. The gelatin wiggled on the plate. To move or cause to move with short, jerky or twisting motions from side to side; wriggle shakily or sinuously. To insinuate or extricate oneself by sly or subtle means. Wiggled out of a social engagement.