wobbles

listen to the pronunciation of wobbles
English - English
plural of wobble
third-person singular of wobble
wobble
To vacillate in one's opinions

I'm wobbling between the Liberals and the Greens.

wobble
To move with an uneven or rocking motion, or unsteadily to and fro

The jelly wobbled on the plate.

wobble
To tremble or quaver

The soprano's voice wobbled alarmingly.

wobble
To cause to wobble
wobble
The ability of certain bases at the third position of an anticodon in tRNA to form hydrogen bonds in various ways, causing alignment with several possible codons Referring to the reduced constraint of the third base of an anticodon as compared with the other bases thus allowing additional complementary base pairings
wobble
Continuous, sinusoidal radial deviation of the prerecorded groove from track centerline Usually includes CLV and other information, such as location, contained in phase or other forms of modulation
wobble
An unsteady motion
wobble
move sideways or in an unsteady way; "The ship careened out of control"
wobble
move unsteadily; "His knees wobbled"; "The old cart wobbled down the street"
wobble
In reference to reading the genetic code, the concept that nonstandard base pairing is allowed between the anticodon and the third position of the condon
wobble
To vacillate in ones opinions
wobble
an unsteady rocking motion move unsteadily; "His knees wobbled"; "The old cart wobbled down the street
wobble
{f} move from side to side; sway; tremble, vibrate; be indecisive
wobble
A slow vibrato resulting from a lack of excitement, poor muscle tone, or fatigue
wobble
If something or someone wobbles, they make small movements from side to side, for example because they are unsteady. The table wobbled when I leaned on it I narrowly missed a cyclist who wobbled into my path Wobble is also a noun. We might look for a tiny wobble in the position of a star
wobble
A tremulous sound
wobble
tremble or shake; "His voice wobbled with restrained emotion"
wobble
{i} tottering or swaying motion; shaking, quaking, quivering; wavering, hesitation
wobble
For a rotary stage, it is the maximum angular variation of the axis of rotation
wobble
an unsteady rocking motion
wobbles

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ 'wä-b&l ] (verb.) 1657. probably from Low German wabbeln; akin to Old English w[AE]fre restless; more at WAVER.
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