Sentence examples for wiggle from inspiring English sources

The word "wiggle" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it as a verb to mean to move or cause to move up and down with small, quick movements. For example: "She wiggled her toes in the sand."

Dictionary

wiggle

verb

To move with irregular, back and forward or side to side motions; To shake or jiggle.

  • Her hips wiggle as she walks.

synonyms

Exact(48)

If you want a new design before you go and hang out with Sam Cam in Ibiza, in other words, you need to get a wiggle on.

In 2013, not long after successfully restoring rigorous science standards infamously undone by school board creationists during the previous decade, Kansas quietly became the fifth state, following Texas, Florida, Arkansas and Oklahoma, to pass controversial civics education legislation creating what some view as legal wiggle room for teaching US history with a religious slant.

There is no wiggle room.

They will be permitted to cut their tariffs on these goods by less, in exchange for letting in larger amounts at lower rates of duty.Even so, despite all the exemptions and wiggle room, the deal contains the promise of real liberalisation.

It also happens that this is not John McCain's position he is anti-abortion, but supports wiggle room at the state level.

Little wonder so many of his supporters felt cheated.Out door-knocking in the constituency, Mr Coppard misses no opportunity to wiggle the knife deep into his opponent's reputation.

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Similar(12)

Indeed, he left the convention with more wiggle-room than he had going in.

Economic recovery has given Mr Strauss-Kahn more wiggle-room; and, this being France's first budget since it passed the Maastricht treaty's tests for joining Europe's single currency next year, he has not had his predecessors' worries on that score.

A home-grown one is not subject to any such political caveats.The administration left itself remarkably little wiggle-room in the mandate that it gave Dr Cicerone.

Instead he deployed a lexicon of ambiguity—"structures of state" or "sovereignty"—that left wiggle-room if things went wrong.

So when talks resume, probably again in France, the KLA is likely to agree to the West's proposals thus shifting the pressure back to Mr Milosevic and the Serbs.Would that leave him with any wiggle-room?

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