wiggler

IPA: wˈɪgʌɫɝ

noun

  • Anything that wiggles.
  • The larva of a mosquito.
  • (Southern US) An earthworm.
  • (manufacturing) Any of several types of tool for center-finding or edge-finding in manufacturing, especially metalworking.
  • (physics) A magnet designed to make a beam of charged particles follow a curving path in an accelerator.
Advertisement

Examples of "wiggler" in Sentences

  • Huh! And as for the wiggler who said, I think his name is NOT SURE, he said,
  • Have to say that nothing works better for brook trout than a nice red wiggler on a small hook.
  • Well, TP wanted to post 1 more, but I advised them against running a thread all about you, wiggler ….
  • So enliven a gardener's world with a 1,000-count box of live red wiggler composting worms from Uncle Jim's Worm Farm.
  • It took them, he told [the] [his] attentive audience, about three days to hatch; the larva stage lasted about a week; and the pupa, usually called the "wiggler," lasted to more days.
  • My friend Christian, who famously composts his own (bigger) dogs 'poop, clued me into the importance of red wiggler worms, so I decided to go to nearby Buena Vista Park to dig for some.
  • Immediately a two-page footnote explains that David Wallace had "already left the Internal Revenue Service in 1987," that his job was "a rote examiner, aka a 'wiggler' in the Service ­nomenclature," and that his "civil service rank was a GS-9."
  • From your split shot ... drop 12 inches of 2X, tie on a wiggler or a bloack leech, or a black bugger, attach another foot of 2X to the hook shank, then tie on a glo bug (egg) blue is good, but for where you live, peach or cream or a combo of both is better.

Related Links

synonyms for wigglerdescribing words for wiggler
Advertisement
#AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMmNnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz

© 2025 Copyright: WordPapa