sidle
Plural: sidles
Verb
Verb Forms: sidled, sidling, sidles
- To move sideways in a shy or furtive manner.
- move unobtrusively or furtively
- "The young man began to sidle near the pretty girl sitting on the log"
- move sideways
- To (cause something to) move sideways.
- In the intransitive sense often followed by up: to (cause something to) advance in a coy, furtive, or unobtrusive manner.
Noun
- An act of sidling.
- A sideways movement.
- An act of sidling.
- A furtive advance.
Examples
- He tried to SIDLE a ’Q’ onto a double letter score, but I challenged it.
Origin / Etymology
The verb is from side + -le (frequentative suffix), possibly a back-formation from sideling (“in a sidelong direction; askew, obliquely”, adverb), treating that word as the present participle of sidle.
The noun is derived from the verb.
Synonyms
Scrabble Score: 6
sidle: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordsidle: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
sidle: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary
Words With Friends Score: 7
sidle: valid Words With Friends Word