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Definition of diddle verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

diddle

verb
 
/ˈdɪdl/
 
/ˈdɪdl/
(informal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they diddle
 
/ˈdɪdl/
 
/ˈdɪdl/
he / she / it diddles
 
/ˈdɪdlz/
 
/ˈdɪdlz/
past simple diddled
 
/ˈdɪdld/
 
/ˈdɪdld/
past participle diddled
 
/ˈdɪdld/
 
/ˈdɪdld/
-ing form diddling
 
/ˈdɪdlɪŋ/
 
/ˈdɪdlɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. [transitive] diddle somebody (out of something) (British English) to get money or some advantage from somebody by cheating them synonym cheat
    • He’s been diddling the taxman for years.
    • My old boss diddled me out of over £5 000.
  2. [intransitive] diddle (around) (North American English) to waste time without having a purpose
    • Sometimes I just diddle around all day.
  3. [intransitive] diddle (with something) (North American English) to play with something carelessly or without thinking
    • He diddled with the graphics on his computer.
  4. Word Originearly 19th cent.: probably from the name of Jeremy Diddler, a character in the farce Raising the Wind (1803) by the Irish dramatist James Kenney (1780–1849). Diddler constantly borrowed and failed to repay small sums of money: the name may be based on an earlier verb diddle ‘walk unsteadily’.
See diddle in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
aspiration
noun
 
 
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