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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Drabble

Drabble \Drab"ble\, v. i. To fish with a long line and rod; as, to drabble for barbels.

Drabble

Drabble \Drab"ble\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Drabbled; p. pr. & vb. n. Drabbling.] [???.See Drab, Draff.] To draggle; to wet and befoul by draggling; as, to drabble a gown or cloak.
--Halliwell.

Wiktionary
drabble

Etymology 1 vb. 1 (context transitive English) To wet or dirty, especially by dragging through mud. 2 (context intransitive English) To fish with a long line and rod. Etymology 2

n. A short fictional story, typically in fan fiction, sometimes exactly 100 words long.

Wikipedia
Drabble

A drabble is a short work of fiction of around one hundred words in length. The purpose of the drabble is brevity, testing the author's ability to express interesting and meaningful ideas in a confined space.

Drabble (comic strip)

Drabble is an internationally syndicated comic strip that appears in about 200 newspapers. Kevin Fagan created the strip in 1979 and still remains the sole writer and artist. The strip centers on the Drabble family.

Drabble (disambiguation)

A drabble is a work of fiction that is exactly 100 words long. The word may also refer to:

  • Drabble (surname)
  • Drabble (comic strip), a comic strip by Kevin Fagan
Drabble (surname)

Drabble is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Frank Drabble (1888–1964), English footballer
  • Gareth Drabble (born 1990), rugby union player
  • Margaret Drabble (born 1939), English novelist, biographer, and critic
  • Phil Drabble (1914–2007), English author and television presenter

Usage examples of "drabble".

Adding to his anger and concern was the fact that he was accompanied by two good men-Ozzy Drabble and Hec Magill-whose lives were his reponsibility.

Bridgetown Grill was hotter still, flaring with the spit and sizzle of Jamaican cooking in the open kitchen that ran the length of the narrow gallery painted with palm trees and crowded by fast-talking dental hygienists whose glasses kept steaming up, and by white rastas whose dreads drabbled through their blackened fish and hot sauce unnoticed.

Anne, clinging to Gilbert Blythe's hand, scrambled down into the dory, where she sat, drabbled and furious, in the stern with her arms full of dripping shawl and wet crepe.

Her dress skirt was gone, her petticoat wet and drabbled, and the waist of her dress was almost torn from her body.

Plainly I see that it is not my drabbled skirts he is sorry for, it is my addled wits.

He gave out dribbles and drabbles of information about the strange people in Germany and their amazing devices to several wealthy men in search of a patron, and finally found one in Don Giovanni Romano, a merchant with ties to many other wealthy men.

Not in little dribbles and drabbles, like fission or fusion, but one hundred point zero zero zero zero per cent conversion?

Slowly he raised his head and saw her, only a few paces away, eyeing him, her beak drabbling a spittle of venom, and a green ooze trickling from below her wounded eye.

The head groom, Peter Drabble, had fitted her out with a small, neat English saddle, but in her dreams she rode bareback.