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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
straggle
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
in
▪ Soon the rest of the girls would straggle in, the mail would arrive and another week would be under way.
▪ Their last surviving companion straggled in after them; he had found his way alone.
▪ The patients sit down when he does; then the little nurses arid the residents straggle in.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Her hair straggled around her face.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A straggling line of women and children on the move with their meager possessions atop their heads.
▪ And got heavier as they left the small station and straggled down a steep, cinder path.
▪ His vignettes depict scenes of trapped journalists, straggling soldiers and gruesome battles.
▪ I imagined solemn covens chanting, straggling torchlight processions winding up to mountain tops, stone circles, sacred trees and springs.
▪ I loved the row of collard greens straggling across the garden.
▪ One by one the travelers were straggling out of Customs.
▪ Their last surviving companion straggled in after them; he had found his way alone.
▪ They had been moving in a group, or trying to: actually, they had straggled widely at times.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Straggle

Straggle \Strag"gle\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Straggled; p. pr. & vb. n. Straggling.] [Freq. of OE. straken to roam, to stroke. See Stroke, v. t.]

  1. To wander from the direct course or way; to rove; to stray; to wander from the line of march or desert the line of battle; as, when troops are on the march, the men should not straggle.
    --Dryden.

  2. To wander at large; to roam idly about; to ramble.

    The wolf spied out a straggling kid.
    --L'Estrange.

  3. To escape or stretch beyond proper limits, as the branches of a plant; to spread widely apart; to shoot too far or widely in growth.

    Trim off the small, superfluous branches on each side of the hedge that straggle too far out.
    --Mortimer.

  4. To be dispersed or separated; to occur at intervals. ``Straggling pistol shots.''
    --Sir W. Scott.

    They came between Scylla and Charybdis and the straggling rocks.
    --Sir W. Raleigh.

Straggle

Straggle \Strag"gle\, n. The act of straggling. [R.]
--Carlyle.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
straggle

early 15c., "to wander from the proper path, stray, to rove from one's companions," perhaps from a Scandinavian source (compare dialectal Norwegian stragla "to walk laboriously"), or a frequentative of Middle English straken "to move, go." Specifically of soldiers, "be dispersed, be apart from the main body," from 1520s. Related: Straggled; straggling.

Wiktionary
straggle

n. The act of straggling. vb. 1 To stray from the road, course or line of march. 2 To wander about; ramble. 3 To spread at irregular intervals.

WordNet
straggle

n. a wandering or disorderly grouping (of things or persons); "a straggle of outbuildings"; "a straggle of followers"

straggle
  1. v. wander from a direct or straight course [syn: sidetrack, depart, digress]

  2. go, come, or spread in a rambling or irregular way; "Branches straggling out quite far" [syn: sprawl]

Usage examples of "straggle".

In its struggles to see in through the open door, the crowd formed itself into a straggling wedge, with the more adventurous apex nearest the inn.

More had scattered to the winds when ordered units of dragoons had ridden in and poured two deadly pistol volleys against the straggling, vulnerable flanks, then regrouped and reloaded out of arquebus range.

I felt sure Chad had guessed the nature of the surprise we planned for him, but he affected to be astonished when we joined the straggling line of people making their way into the theatre.

Taboga, Captain Sharp went cruising to an island some miles distant to pick up some straggling drunkards who belonged to his ship.

The infantry escort is disposed along the line with every precaution that can be suggested, but the danger of an attack upon the long straggling string of doolies and animals in difficult and broken ground is a very real and terrible one.

Failing to make an irrigated farm in Pecos pay, Asa Williamson packed the family belongings into a covered wagon in 1915 and, with the livestock straggling along behind, headed for the Llano Estacado, in eastern New Mexico.

From here the village looked like someone had dropped a box of toy blocks, white and pink and mostly brown around the edges, ringed in a wide straggle of fences, corrals, sheds, and barns, the stream bright on one side, demon shrines making spots of red or blue in the corners of the fields, and the church a fantasia of color and gilt.

Stark could make out straggling bands of Farers still on them, heading for Irnan.

But his beard was an untidy straggling thing and he was a short, heavy-set man wearing a tight yellow jerkin and loose-fitting trousers that flared at the cuffs, Folkish clothes, and his face, framed by his long unkempt grayish hair, was a pure Folkish face, coarse-featured, heavy-jawed, bulbous-nosed.

The warehouses were on the left, with the Molt hovels straggling against the Mirror beyond.

Mondragon found Hinch behind him at the top of the cabin steps, gaunt face flushed behind the straggle of beard, a pistol in his hand.

Jasmine, forsythia, Hypericum and mallow straggle over the bases of the wooden beams which support the end wall of the row of shops.

They wrapped in the felts designed for storms until, from a distance, they might well have seemed to be a straggling column of mummies, bandages peeling, staggering and lurching from their inquiet sleep.

Then Walsh and Kenna emerged, their aides following in an odd straggle.

From the edge of the rich, flowery fields on which I trod to the midway sides of the snowy Olympus, the ground could only here and there show an abrupt crag, or a high straggling ridge that up-shouldered itself from out of the wilderness of myrtles, and of the thousand bright-leaved shrubs that twined their arms together in lovesome tangles.