Dictionary
the drivel
verb
To have saliva drip from the mouth; to drool.
Exact(40)
But I needed the drivel to get to it.
Peculiarly, among the drivel, there's also a strong sense of contempt for PewDiePie's fans.
"Being judgmental" is a very bad thing in the OMG studio, however gormless the drivel flowing from one's mouth is.
He writes a poem for the last issue of the Drivel Review: I wanted to ran, run after her into the night, even though it was day.
The narrator submits his pieces to at least five magazines to make sure they're rejected before he'll publish them in the Drivel Review.
Ashley Parker's well-written article acts as a nice antidote to the drivel that is usually written on the subject of Generations X and Y.
Similar(20)
It's not all that different from the situation of, say, the preppy and the dying girl in the drivelling "Love Story," of almost forty years ago.
If, like Holmes, you really don't care how you look, you might be able to drag Corbyn down to your level and have him either weeping in frustration and rage or joining in with the drivelling idiocy.
She invites the lily to join the show, "to elevate the canned drivel of nostalgia with the here and now".
The forging of cultural connections and the search for common understanding cannot be brushed aside as the romantic drivel of the so-called "luvvies".
We began picturing a young Mr. Stipe at the lunch table, head shaved, face painted half blue, grimly enduring the soulless drivel of the sugar-crazed little Philistines around him.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com