• wriggle VERB 1) twist and turn with quick writhing movements. 2) (wriggle out of) avoid by devious means. NOUN a wriggling movement.
  • v. t. To move with short, quick contortions; to move by twisting and squirming; like a worm. a. Wriggling; frisky; pliant; flexible. Wriggle.
  • If you wriggle or wriggle part of your body, you twist and turn with quick movements, for example because you are uncomfortable.
  • Why bother to wriggle out of accepting that Ecclestone was a fat donor? He can not pay the tax, and does everything he can to wriggle out of their demand.
  • Find out all about Wriggle: meaning, pronunciation, synonyms, antonyms, origin, difficulty, usage index and more. Only at Word Panda dictionary.
  • To wriggle is to squirm and twist quickly. Think of how hard it is to hold a rambunctious puppy as it wriggles in your arms.
  • The connotation of wriggle often implies a purposeful action, aiming towards achieving a specific outcome, such as wriggling free from a restraint.
  • Perhaps there are moments when the man has remembered his childish language, betrayed by his fondness for such words as 'wriggle', 'slither' and 'squish'.
  • Wriggle is a playful and indefinite experimental display typeface created from the first set of characters from the 36 Days of Type challenge.