If you waggle something, or if something waggles, it moves up and down or from side to side with short quick movements. He was waggling his toes in his socks puppet animals with eyes that move and ears that waggle. = wiggle. to move something up and down or from side to side using short quick movements = wiggle (wag)
some kind of motion or movement (can be very individualized, but many times a back and forth movement at the hands/wrists) of the club for the purpose of staying loose, feeling the club, keeping the body in motion instead of holding still Example: She had a very distinctive waggle
some kind of motion or movement (can be very individualized) many times a back and forth of the club for the purpose of staying loose, feeling the club, keeping the body in motion instead of holding still
A dance in the form of a figure eight performed by the honey bee in order to communicate the direction and distance of patches of flowers, water sources, etc
[ 'wa-g&l ] (verb.) 1594. Frequentative form of wag. Compare continental equivalents Middle High German wacken ( > Danish vakle, German wackeln), Swedish vagla, West Frisian waggelje, Dutch waggelen.