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Discover Ludwig"dribble on" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It means to let saliva or liquid fall from one's mouth in a continuous stream. It can also mean speaking in a droning, monotonous manner. Example: The baby was teething and couldn't control his saliva, so he dribbled on his bib. The professor's lectures were so boring, I found myself dozing off as he dribbled on about the history of economics.
Exact(30)
If you only dribble on one side, then your defender will know where are you going, but if you change the direction, then it will be harder for him or her to stop you.
The hate tweets dribble on.
On some days, there is a mere dribble; on others a loud torrent from the roof.
It makes a delightful syrup, to dribble on panna cotta or poached pears, or to make a quick ginger ale.
And please, leery tragi-men, don't dribble on about "Scarlett Johansson's arse in 3D" being "worth the price of admission".
In between, the Huskies played defense, defense and more defense while barely putting a dribble on the floor.
Similar(29)
Byears was dribbling on a fast break when Marciniak fouled her.
No, Turnbull mostly spent three years trying to avoid a leadership spill, while history just dribbled on without him.
Hazard completed five dribbles on Saturday, one more than the rest of his team-mates combined, and is the first player to complete as many for Chelsea in the Premier League since Ramires last December.
You don't go dribbling on.
Why are they dribbling on my show?
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com