drabble
21drabble — verb archaic make wet and dirty in muddy water. Origin ME: from Low Ger. drabbelen paddle in water or mire …
22drabble — v. a. [Archaic and provincial.] Draggle, trail, daggle, befoul, bemire …
23drabble — drab·ble …
24Drabble — Drab•ble [[t]ˈdræb əl[/t]] n. big Margaret, born 1939, English novelist (sister of A.S. Byatt) …
25drabble — drab•ble [[t]ˈdræb əl[/t]] v. t. v. i. bled, bling to make or become wet and dirty; draggle • Etymology: 1350–1400; ME drabelen < MLG drabbeln to wade in liquid mud, bespatter < drabbe liquid mud …
26drabble — /ˈdræbəl/ (say drabuhl) verb (drabbled, drabbling) Rare –verb (t) 1. to make wet and dirty; draggle. –verb (i) 2. to become wet and dirty. {Middle English drabelen, ? from Low German drabbeln to wade in muddy water} …
27Drabble — /ˈdræbəl/ (say drabuhl) noun Margaret, born 1939, English writer; noted for novels about middle class life such as The Millstone (1965) and The Radiant Way (1987) …
28drabble — v.intr. & tr. become or make dirty and wet with water or mud. Etymology: ME f. LG drabbelen paddle in water or mire: cf. DRAB(3) …
29Margaret Drabble — ➡ Drabble * * * …
30Drabble, Margaret — (n. 5 jun. 1939, Sheffield, Yorkshire, Inglaterra). Novelista inglesa. Se graduó en la Universidad de Cambridge. Entre sus novelas, se cuentan La piedra del molino (1966), El reino de oro (1975), El camino radiante (1987) y Las puertas de marfil… …