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Twiddle vs Twiddly - What's the difference?

twiddle | twiddly |

As a verb twiddle

is to wiggle, fidget or play with; to move around.

As a noun twiddle

is a slight twist with the fingers.

As an adjective twiddly is

capable of being finely or idly adjusted with the fingers.

twiddle

English

Verb

(twiddl)
  • To wiggle, fidget or play with; to move around.
  • She sat and nervously twiddled her hair while she waited.
  • (computing) To flip or switch two adjacent bits.
  • (mathematics) To be in an equivalence relation with.
  • To play with anything; hence, to be busy about trifles.
  • (Halliwell)

    Derived terms

    * twiddle one's thumbs * twiddler

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A slight twist with the fingers.
  • (UK, dialect) A pimple.
  • (Halliwell)

    twiddly

    English

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • Capable of being finely or idly adjusted with the fingers.
  • * 2011 , Fi Glover, Travels With My Radio: I Am An Oil Tanker
  • Radio – with its buttons and twiddly knobs and white noise in between – is on the tip of a huge wave of change, courtesy of the Internet.
  • * (John Galsworthy)
  • Through the open doorway Nedda could see the back of Mr. Cuthcott in a twiddly chair, surrounded by sheets of paper reposing on the floor, shining like autumn leaves on a pool of water.
  • Having an elaborately twisted form.
  • * 1958 , New Scientist
  • The design of an indicator is often — indeed usually — thought to be the business of the engineer, perhaps aided by someone — an artist or a "stylist" — who adds an aesthetic touch, a twiddly bit, a strip of chromium, a dash of paint, or better still several dashes in clashing colours, of which a bilious yellow will be one.
  • * 2010 , Lawrence Zeegen, Complete Digital Illustration: A Master Class in Image-Making
  • Everyone has a computer, everyone has the same software, and everyone thinks they can stick a couple of butterflies onto a twiddly background and they have an illustration. They don't have an illustration; they have decoration.
  • * 2011 , Pamela Haines, Men on White Horses
  • It was her nose was the worst. It seemed to have been twisted into a hook with a twiddly bit at the top.
  • In music, having a rapid series of musical notes.
  • * {{quote-news, year=2001, date=September 7, author=Kevin Whitehead, title=The Gap Band, work=Chicago Reader citation
  • , passage=There are moments when the band sounds oddly like its acoustic predecessor, and there are some feints at free jazz, but the most curious episode, unlike any other live Miles I know, is a long spacey improvisation using wood flute, related less to the twiddly studio jams than to the ritual atmospherics of Chicago's creative-music vanguard. }}
  • * 2011 , Gavin Lyall, All Honourable Men
  • The bugle called, a twiddly bit and then one long note.