dawdle

/ˈdɔdl̩/

UK: /ˈdɔːdl̩/

dawdle

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Definition

Chiefly followed by away: to spend (time) without haste or purpose.

Etymology

The verb is possibly: * a variant of daddle (“(Britain, dialectal) to walk or work slowly, dawdle, saunter, trifle”) or doddle (“(Britain, dialectal) to walk feebly or slowly, dawdle, idle, saunter, stroll”), possibly influenced by daw (“(Britain, dialectal) lazy, good-for-nothing person, sluggard”); or * borrowed from Middle Low German dȫdelen (“to dawdle”), related to Saterland Frisian döädelje (“to dawdle”); compare also German daddeln (“to play”), German verdaddeln (“to waste (time), neglect, ruin”). All of these words are assumed to be of imitative origin. The noun is derived from the verb.

Example Sentences

  • "to dawdle away the whole morning"
  • "[M]anaging to live on terms with both / Opposing potentates, the Power and you, / Crowned with success, but dawdle out my days / In exile here at Clairvaux, with mock love, […]"
  • "Tell him, if he'll call on me, and davvdle over a diſh of tea in an afternoon, I ſhall take it kind."
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