diddles
Meaning of diddles
- cheat or swindle (someone) so as to deprive them of something.
he thought he'd been diddled out of his change
- pass time aimlessly or unproductively.
I felt sorry for her, diddling around in her room while her friends were having a good time
- have sex with (someone).
early 19th century: probably from the name of Jeremy Diddler, a character in the farce Raising the Wind (1803) by the Irish dramatist James Kenney (1780–1849). Diddler constantly borrowed and failed to repay small sums of money: the name may be based on an earlier verb diddle ‘walk unsteadily’.
Information about diddles
- It is a verb.
- The singular form of diddles is: diddle.
- Languages in which diddles is used:
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Hyphenation of diddles
did-dles
- It consists of 2 syllables and 7 chars.
- diddles is a word disyllabic because it has two syllables
Words that rhyme with diddles
beadles, cradles, encradles, ladles, padles, treadles, addles, befuddles, bemuddles, bestraddles, boddles, buddles, coddles, comeddles, condiddles, cruddles, cuddles, daddles, doddles, faddles, fiddles, fuddles, griddles, guddles, heddles, hoddles, huddles, intermeddles, kiddles, meddles, middles, mollycoddles, muddles, noddles, offsaddles, packsaddles, paddles, paradiddles, peddles, phonofiddles, piddles, puddles, quiddles, raddles, reddles, resaddles, riddles, ruddles, saddles, scuddles