English » German

II . wig·gle [ˈwɪgl̩] VB intr

III . wig·gle [ˈwɪgl̩] N

1. wiggle (movement):

wiggle
she walks with a sexy wiggle

2. wiggle (line):

wiggle

3. wiggle esp Am inf (hurry):

to get a wiggle on

ˈwig·gle room N no pl inf fig

Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to get a wiggle on
she walks with a sexy wiggle

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The method for walking the graver may also be referred to as wriggle or wiggle cuts.
en.wikipedia.org
They can not pull their hind-flippers forward, and move on land by lunging, bouncing and wiggling while their fore-flippers keep them balanced.
en.wikipedia.org
There is some wiggle room because collections such as books may be counted as a single list item.
en.wikipedia.org
This wiggle-matching technique can lead to more precise dating than is possible with individual radiocarbon dates.
en.wikipedia.org
Folders were introduced as well: dragging an application on top of another application while in wiggle mode will result in a folder being created.
en.wikipedia.org
In operation, the antennas now flex and wiggle like fingers reaching for something.
en.wikipedia.org
Still, not too bad a choice for preschoolers in need of a wiggle break.
en.wikipedia.org
Its limbs are said to wiggle permanently, as if there was a straight gust of wind, even if it was a windless day.
en.wikipedia.org
He communicated by wiggling his fingers and blinking his eyes.
en.wikipedia.org
Wiggle stereoscopy is an image display technique achieved by quickly alternating display of left and right sides of a stereogram.
en.wikipedia.org

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