twiddle
A slight twist with the fingers.
Noun
- A slight twist with the fingers.
- He put away the receiver with a twiddle of pudgy fingers. - 2011, Edgar Pangborn, A Mirror for Observers:
- The hero, who must have been only a very few years older than Tom himself, gave a cursory nod and a twiddle of his fingers, then turned to his left to address Daniel Lysons who did not answer but caught Tom’s eye and...
- A wiggling movement.
- Why should I agree that a twiddle of skirts from right to left and pointing a toe in one direction mean “He loves me,” while the reverse twiddle and the toe pointed in the opposite direction “He loves me not”? - 1945,...
- Instead, flagellar motion causes the bacterium to swim smoothly (called a run), then stop and tumble (a twiddle), followed by another period of smooth swimming - 1998, James D. Mauseth, Botany: An Introduction to Plant...
- A raised white brow in my direction, and a twiddle of the pipe stem toward the trail indicated that his wife was at our house, if that's who I was looking for. - 2011, Diana Gabaldon, A Breath Of Snow And Ashes, page...
- A small decorative embellishment.
- A great many fidgety occupations will come to an end: we shan’t put a pattern on a cloth or a twiddle on a jug-handle to sell it, but to make it prettier and to amuse ourselves and others. - 1887, William Morris, The...
- Literally construed the Act would allow design right to be claimed in the design of an insignificant part—a mere ‘twiddle’, as it was put in argument. - 2004, Reports of Patent, Design, and Trade Mark Cases:
- That’s Mara’s usual line, you know—three curves and a twiddle, label it “Object,” and bob’s your uncle. - 2012, Nicholas Blake, Head of a Traveller, →ISBN:
- A small musical flourish.
- “Oh, auntie,” she exclaims, “these great Goths of Englishmen put a twiddle into the last bar of the ‘Minstrel Boy,’ just fancy that!” - 1899, Truth, volume 46, page 366:
- That opening little flutter down the scale evokes an atmosphere when played by the flute; on the pianoforte it is a mere twiddle. - 1925, The Musical Times and Singing-class Circular, page 59:
- With a toot on the flute and a twiddle on the fiddle, O! - 1939, The Nineteenth Century and After, volume CXXVI, page 76:
- A tilde.
- For those places which feed input arcs leading to more than one transition, a “twiddle” symbol (e.g., ‘~’) may be used as the enabling predicate for one of the transitions. - 1985, Yechiam Yemini, Robert Strom, Shaula...
- The twiddle symbol indicates that a node has a particular distribution. For example, x ~ dbin(p,n) means that “x is distributed like the number of successes in n observations of a Bernoulli process.” Inadvertent use of...
- A drawn line that is curvy or twisted.
- It will then be seen that the inscriptions are very nearly alike, but an expert in Arabic or Vedic writing would recognize at once that they differ in more respects than in having a “twiddle too much or a twiddle too...
- But D’s flourish was not generally a simple curl but a twiddle, as seen in the words of (35, 37, 70, 79, 94), sealf (85, 146) and yf (95, 142); this twiddle, which also appears in the Mistress Poem (p. 256), was however...
- Professional scribes (French, Burgundian, what you will) must sometimes have spoiled a copy – duplicated a word, misplaced a twiddle. - 2012, Sylvia Townsend Warner, The Music At Long Verney, →ISBN:
- A tiny bit.
- Trying to tune in on your own face color is a bit like that: a twiddle too red, a twiddle too pale, and the whole image goes haywire. - 1968, Mademoiselle: The Magazine for the Smart Young Woman:
- But I don’t care a twiddle if I offend Danny DePuzo or not. - 1987, Eve Bunting, Janet Hamm Needs a Date for the Dance, →ISBN, page 7:
- It should give you, somewhere, deep down a twiddle of respect. - 2014, Norman Rose, Harold Nicolson, →ISBN, page cxxxvi:
- A tizzy.
- Hey, diddle, diddle, we’re all in a twiddle, / Although we’re cuffed and we’re cuffed, / To be quite exact we cannot act, / For, you see, we are all of us stuffed. - 1938, Grade Teacher, volume 56, page 46:
- Your mother’s going to have a twiddle fit if you dumped a perfectly good lord in the river. - 1998, Judy Veisel, Flight of Fancy, page 19:
- In addition, nowhere in the article did I sense that anyone is angry at Serrano or blaming the school for lax security or getting their tighties in a twiddle about this or that. - 2010, Matt Soper, Raising Up a...
Origin
Unknown. Perhaps a blend of twirl, twist, or twitch; fiddle.
Forms
Verb
- To wiggle, fidget or play with; to move around.
- She sat and nervously twiddled her hair while she waited.
- The harder Small sang, the harder the cow chewed and the faster she twiddled her ears around as if stirring the song into the food to be rechewed in cud along with her breakfast. - 1942, Emily Carr, “Singing”, in The...
- To flip or switch two adjacent bits (binary digits).
Coordinate Terms: diddle
- To be in an equivalence relation with.
- To play with anything; hence, to be busy about trifles.
Forms
Derived
twiddle one's thumbs twiddler twiddlesome twiddling line twiddle muff