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Dawdling   /dˈɔdlɪŋ/   Listen
Dawdling

noun
1.
The deliberate act of delaying and playing instead of working.  Synonyms: dalliance, trifling.



Dawdle

verb
(past & past part. dawdled; pres. part. dawdling)
1.
Take one's time; proceed slowly.  Synonym: linger.
2.
Waste time.  Synonym: dally.
3.
Hang (back) or fall (behind) in movement, progress, development, etc..  Synonyms: fall back, fall behind, lag.



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"Dawdling" Quotes from Famous Books



... saying that housewives set their kitchen clocks by Eddie's transits to and from the factory. At any rate, there was no end to the occasions when shiftless gossips, dawdling on their porches, were surprised to see Eddie toddle ...
— In a Little Town • Rupert Hughes

... (1863) is a typical example. Here the dramatist sketches a tragic incident arising from the conflict of two social classes, the petty tradesmen and the nobility. From the coarse environment of the first emerge honest, upright natures like Krasnov; from the superficial, dawdling culture of the second come weak-willed triflers like Babayev. The sordid plot sweeps on to its inevitable ...
— Plays • Alexander Ostrovsky

... she could not: she expected company to dinner; she believed their brother, Lord Robert(697) would dine with them: I thought that a little odd, as they had Just turned him out for Oxfordshire; and I thought a dinner no cause at the distance of four miles. In her grace's dawdling way, she could fix no time: and so on Friday, at half an hour after seven, as I was going to Lady North's, they arrived; and the sun being setting, and the moon not risen, You may judge how much they could see through all the ...
— Letters of Horace Walpole, V4 • Horace Walpole

... of that book?" at length asked a man who had been dawdling for an hour in the front store of Benjamin Franklin's newspaper establishment. "One dollar," replied the clerk. "One dollar," echoed the lounger; "can't you take less than that?" "One dollar is the price," was ...
— Pushing to the Front • Orison Swett Marden

... a child on a pony tore into the weed-grown drive leading to the great mansion on the hill, scaring a lone darky who had been dawdling ...
— Special Messenger • Robert W. Chambers


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