diddle

  • 21diddle — verb (diddled; diddling) Etymology: origin unknown Date: 1786 transitive verb 1. chiefly dialect to move with short rapid motions 2. to waste (as time) in trifling 3. hoax, swindle 4 …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 22diddle — 1. noun a) In percussion, two consecutive notes played by the same hand (either RR or LL), similar to the drag, except that by convention diddles are played the as the context in which they are placed b) The penis. 2. verb a) to …

    Wiktionary

  • 23diddle — Synonyms and related words: ball, bamboozle, be intimate, beat, beguile, beguile of, beguile the time, betray, bilk, bluff, bunco, burn, burn daylight, cajole, cheat, cheat on, chisel, chouse, chouse out of, circumvent, cog, cog the dice, cohabit …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 24Diddle — 1. cheat; swindle; victimise; 2. have sexual intercourse with (someone); 3. sexually stimulate (a woman) manually …

    Dictionary of Australian slang

  • 25diddle — Australian Slang 1. cheat; swindle; victimise; 2. have sexual intercourse with (someone); 3. sexually stimulate (a woman) manually …

    English dialects glossary

  • 26diddle — I (Roget s Thesaurus II) verb Slang. To get money or something else from by deceitful trickery: bilk, cheat, cozen, defraud, gull, mulct, rook, swindle, victimize. Informal: chisel, flimflam, take, trim. Slang: do, gyp, stick, sting. See HONEST.… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 27diddle — did|dle [ dıdl ] verb INFORMAL 1. ) intransitive AMERICAN to spend time doing something in a way that is not very serious 2. ) transitive to trick or cheat someone: He got diddled out of his inheritance …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 28diddle — did·dle || dɪdl v. cheat, swindle; play with, fool with; dawdle …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 29diddle — lidded …

    Anagrams dictionary

  • 30diddle — verb informal 1》 cheat or swindle. 2》 N. Amer. waste time. 3》 vulgar slang, chiefly N. Amer. have sex with. Derivatives diddler noun Origin C19: prob. from the name of Jeremy Diddler, a character in the farce Raising the Wind (1803) who… …

    English new terms dictionary