What is another word for dribbles?

Pronunciation: [dɹˈɪbə͡lz] (IPA)

Dribbles refer to small amounts of liquid that are spilled or splashed. However, there are various synonyms that can better describe different aspects of dribbling. Words like trickles, drops, leaks, drizzles, and seepages depict the slow, steady, and continuous flow of a liquid. Meanwhile, words like splatters, spatters, and splashes relate to the sudden and forceful expulsion of liquid. Other synonyms for dribbles include ooze, discharge, pour, flow, and stream. Each of these words has its own unique connotations and can be used interchangeably with dribbles depending on the context and the type of liquid being referred to.

What are the hypernyms for Dribbles?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Dribbles

As a rule, in my experience, the man who sells his produce in quantity to the large buyer or fish-curer is independent, and has cash in hand and bank; while the man who dribbles away his produce through these shops, only giving his summer fish to the fish-curer, is in debt and poverty.
"Second Shetland Truck System Report"
William Guthrie
Not in the dribbles, but such a mine as never a miner drove a pick into yet?
"The Desert Valley"
Jackson Gregory
Since this is a hill country one expects to find springs, but not to depend upon them; for when found they are often brackish and unwholesome, or maddening, slow dribbles in a thirsty soil.
"The Land Of Little Rain"
Mary Hunter Austin

Famous quotes with Dribbles

  • During my high school years, a boy from my neighborhood named Malcolm chose me to be his friend for a season. His elbow nudged my book in the public library one Saturday afternoon as he sprawled forward across the table feigning some condition—boredom, I suppose. His voice was like shadow—as whispery and as indistinct as shadow, due to an adolescent change. “Do you want to wrestle?” he asked. I have never met anyone since who speaks as Malcolm spoke: He daydreamed; he pronounced strategies out loud (as I raked elm leaves from our lawn and piled them in the curb)—about how he would befriend this boy or that boy, never anyone I knew; Malcolm went to a different high school. “First,” he said, “I will tease him about his freckles. Then I will tease him about his laugh—how his laugh sounds a little like a whinny sometimes. I won’t go too far. You should see how his wrist pivots as he dribbles down the court. “He’s got these little curls above his sideburns. I wish I had those.” (He would catch me up on the way to the library.) “What are you reading? We read that last year. Not really a war story, though, is it? Want to go eat French toast?”
    Richard Rodriguez

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