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move+unsteadily

См. также в других словарях:

  • wobble — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. roll, rock, stagger, reel, lurch, yaw, sway; teeter, totter, flounder; hesitate, waver, quaver. See oscillation, agitation. II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. shake, quaver, flounder, vacillate, tremble, quiver …   English dictionary for students

  • teeter — /tee teuhr/, Chiefly Northern U.S. v.i. 1. to move unsteadily. 2. to ride a seesaw; teetertotter. v.t. 3. to tip (something) up and down; move unsteadily. n. 4. a seesaw motion; wobble. 5. a seesaw; teetertotter. [1835 45; var. of dial. titter,… …   Universalium

  • coggle — verb 1. walk unsteadily small children toddle • Syn: ↑toddle, ↑totter, ↑dodder, ↑paddle, ↑waddle • Derivationally related forms: ↑waddle ( …   Useful english dictionary

  • wobble — wob|ble [ˈwɔbəl US ˈwa: ] v [Date: 1600 1700; Origin: Probably from Low German wabbeln] 1.) [I and T] to move unsteadily from side to side, or make something do this ▪ The pile of bricks wobbled and fell. ▪ Tom stopped, wobbling from the weight… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • wobble — verb 1 (I, T) to move unsteadily from side to side, or make something do this: The pile of bricks wobbled and fell. | His fat thighs wobbled as he ran along. | wobble sth: Stop wobbling the table with your foot. 2 (intransitive always + adv/prep) …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • seesaw — I noun a plaything consisting of a board balanced on a fulcrum; the board is ridden up and down by children at either end • Syn: ↑teeter, ↑teeter totter, ↑teetertotter, ↑teeterboard, ↑tilting board, ↑dandle board …   Useful english dictionary

  • stumble — stumble, trip, blunder, lurch, flounder, lumber, galumph, lollop, bumble can mean to move unsteadily, clumsily, or with defective equilibrium (as in walking, in doing, or in proceeding). Stumble, trip, blunder, lurch, and flounder as applied to… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • reel — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English hrēol; akin to Old Norse hræll weaver s reed, Greek krekein to weave Date: before 12th century 1. a revolvable device on which something flexible is wound: as a. a small windlass at the butt of… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • wave — English has two words wave, distinct in origin, which have grown to resemble each other over the centuries. The verb, ‘move to and fro’ [OE], goes back to a prehistoric Germanic base *wab , which also produced English waver [14] (borrowed from… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • swim — {{11}}swim (n.) 1540s, the clear part of any liquid (above the sediment), from SWIM (Cf. swim) (v.). Meaning part of a river or stream frequented by fish (and hence fishermen) is from 1828, and is probably the source of the figurative meaning the …   Etymology dictionary

  • wobble — (v.) 1650s, probably from Low Ger. wabbeln to wobble; cognate with O.N. vafla hover about, totter, related to vafra move unsteadily, from P.Gmc. *wab to move back and forth (see WAVER (Cf. waver)). The noun is attested from 1690s …   Etymology dictionary

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