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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Twangle

Twangle \Twan"gle\, v. i. & t. To twang.

While the twangling violin Struck up with Soldier-laddie.
--Tennyson.

Wiktionary
twangle

vb. (context ambitransitive English) To twang.

Usage examples of "twangle".

The grey roads go beckoning and winding, Peopled with wains, and melodious With harness-bells jangling: Jangling and twangling rough rhythms To the slow march of the stately, great horses Whistled and shouted along.

There was music for them to dance to, a plucking and twangling of strings, a swelling and fading of pipes, where here and there a pilgrim beguiled his way.

Anyone coming in could well hear, from the other side of the corridor, the twangling tinny bumps made by the baffled sound trying to break out of its boxer-glove packaging.

Most unfortunately Mrs Moon was not at home later that afternoon, when Mrs Villiers came in with a gentleman she called Mr Johnson, an American gentleman, by his old-fashioned, twangling way of speaking through his nose, though very well dressed.

The sound board had split under the rigours of winter heating, and the old wires gave forth that nasal, twangling sound peculiar to senile pianos and Siamese cats.