Wobbling Meaning in English
word · lemma: wobble
ˈwɑbəɫɪŋ/, /ˈwɑbɫɪŋ
WAH-buh-ling
wˈɒblɪŋ
WOB-ling
التعريف
Moving unsteadily from side to side or being unstable and about to fall over.
الاستخدام والفروق الدقيقة
Used for physical movement (tables, chairs, people, wheels) or figuratively for uncertain situations. More informal and descriptive; often paired with verbs like 'keep', 'stop', 'start'. Different from 'shaking', as 'wobbling' stresses side-to-side or up-and-down instability.
Spanish: tambaleando - balanceandoPortuguese (BR): balançando - cambaleandoPortuguese (PT): a cambalear - a balançarChinese (Simplified): 摇晃 - 摇摆Chinese (Traditional): 搖晃 - 搖擺Hindi: डगमगाना - हिलनाArabic: يهتز - يتمايلBengali: ডগমগানো - টলমল করাRussian: качаться - шататьсяJapanese: ぐらぐらする - ゆれるVietnamese: lắc lư - lung layKorean: 흔들리다 - 휘청거리다Turkish: sallanmak - yalpalamakUrdu: ڈگمگانا - لرزنا (ناکامیابی سے)Indonesian: bergoyang - goyang
جمل نموذجية
The table is wobbling because one leg is short.
basic
She walked carefully because her ankle was wobbling.
basic
The fan started wobbling and made a strange noise.
basic
My bike wheel was wobbling after I hit the curb.
natural
He tried to stand up, but was wobbling after the ride.
natural
The Jenga tower was wobbling, but somehow it didn’t fall.
natural