Words that rhyme with straddle

  • addle
    v 1: mix up or confuse; "He muddled the issues" [syn: addle, muddle, puddle] 2: become rotten; "addled eggs"
  • apple
    n 1: fruit with red or yellow or green skin and sweet to tart crisp whitish flesh 2: native Eurasian tree widely cultivated in many varieties for its firm rounded edible fruits [syn: apple, orchard apple tree, Malus pumila]
  • astraddle
    adv 1: with one leg on each side; "she sat astride the chair" [syn: astride, astraddle]
  • babble
    n 1: gibberish resembling the sounds of a baby [syn: babble, babbling, lallation] v 1: utter meaningless sounds, like a baby, or utter in an incoherent way; "The old man is only babbling--don't pay attention" 2: to talk foolishly; "The two women babbled and crooned at the baby" [syn: babble, blather, smatter, blether, blither] 3: flow in an irregular current with a bubbling noise; "babbling brooks" [syn: ripple, babble, guggle, burble, bubble, gurgle] 4: divulge confidential information or secrets; "Be careful--his secretary talks" [syn: spill the beans, let the cat out of the bag, talk, tattle, blab, peach, babble, sing, babble out, blab out] [ant: keep one's mouth shut, keep quiet, shut one's mouth]
  • bagel
    n 1: (Yiddish) glazed yeast-raised doughnut-shaped roll with hard crust [syn: bagel, beigel]
  • battle
    n 1: a hostile meeting of opposing military forces in the course of a war; "Grant won a decisive victory in the battle of Chickamauga"; "he lost his romantic ideas about war when he got into a real engagement" [syn: battle, conflict, fight, engagement] 2: an energetic attempt to achieve something; "getting through the crowd was a real struggle"; "he fought a battle for recognition" [syn: struggle, battle] 3: an open clash between two opposing groups (or individuals); "the harder the conflict the more glorious the triumph"-- Thomas Paine; "police tried to control the battle between the pro- and anti-abortion mobs" [syn: conflict, struggle, battle] v 1: battle or contend against in or as if in a battle; "The Kurds are combating Iraqi troops in Northern Iraq"; "We must combat the prejudices against other races"; "they battled over the budget" [syn: battle, combat]
  • bedraggle
    v 1: make wet and dirty, as from rain [syn: bedraggle, draggle]
  • bradawl
    n 1: an awl for making small holes for brads or small screws [syn: bradawl, pricker]
  • brattle
    v 1: make a rattling sound; "clattering dishes" [syn: clatter, clack, brattle]
  • cackle
    n 1: the sound made by a hen after laying an egg 2: noisy talk [syn: yak, yack, yakety-yak, chatter, cackle] 3: a loud laugh suggestive of a hen's cackle v 1: talk or utter in a cackling manner; "The women cackled when they saw the movie star step out of the limousine" 2: squawk shrilly and loudly, characteristic of hens 3: emit a loud, unpleasant kind of laughing
  • cattle
    n 1: domesticated bovine animals as a group regardless of sex or age; "so many head of cattle"; "wait till the cows come home"; "seven thin and ill-favored kine"- Bible; "a team of oxen" [syn: cattle, cows, kine, oxen, Bos taurus]
  • chapel
    n 1: a place of worship that has its own altar 2: a service conducted in a place of worship that has its own altar; "he was late for chapel" [syn: chapel service, chapel]
  • chattel
    n 1: personal as opposed to real property; any tangible movable property (furniture or domestic animals or a car etc) [syn: chattel, personal chattel, movable]
  • crackle
    adj 1: having the surface decorated with a network of fine cracks, as in crackleware; "a crackle glaze" n 1: the sharp sound of snapping noises [syn: crackle, crackling, crepitation] 2: glazed china with a network of fine cracks on the surface [syn: crackle, crackleware, crackle china] v 1: make a crackling sound; "My Rice Krispies crackled in the bowl" [syn: crepitate, crackle] 2: make a crushing noise; "his shoes were crunching on the gravel" [syn: crunch, scranch, scraunch, crackle] 3: to become, or to cause to become, covered with a network of small cracks; "The blazing sun crackled the desert sand"
  • dabble
    v 1: dip a foot or hand briefly into a liquid 2: play in or as if in water, as of small children [syn: dabble, paddle, splash around] 3: work with in an amateurish manner; "She dabbles in astronomy"; "He plays around with investments but he never makes any money" [syn: dabble, smatter, play around] 4: bob forward and under so as to feed off the bottom of a body of water; "dabbling ducks"
  • dapple
    n 1: a small contrasting part of something; "a bald spot"; "a leopard's spots"; "a patch of clouds"; "patches of thin ice"; "a fleck of red" [syn: spot, speckle, dapple, patch, fleck, maculation] v 1: colour with streaks or blotches of different shades [syn: mottle, dapple, cloud]
  • packsaddle
    n 1: a saddle for pack animals to which loads can be attached
  • paddle
    n 1: small wooden bat with a flat surface; used for hitting balls in various games 2: a blade of a paddle wheel or water wheel 3: an instrument of punishment consisting of a flat board 4: a short light oar used without an oarlock to propel a canoe or small boat [syn: paddle, boat paddle] v 1: propel with a paddle; "paddle your own canoe" 2: play in or as if in water, as of small children [syn: dabble, paddle, splash around] 3: swim like a dog in shallow water 4: walk unsteadily; "small children toddle" [syn: toddle, coggle, totter, dodder, paddle, waddle] 5: give a spanking to; subject to a spanking [syn: spank, paddle, larrup] 6: stir with a paddle
  • saddle
    n 1: a seat for the rider of a horse or camel 2: a pass or ridge that slopes gently between two peaks (is shaped like a saddle) [syn: saddleback, saddle] 3: cut of meat (especially mutton or lamb) consisting of part of the backbone and both loins 4: a piece of leather across the instep of a shoe 5: a seat for the rider of a bicycle [syn: bicycle seat, saddle] 6: posterior part of the back of a domestic fowl v 1: put a saddle on; "saddle the horses" [ant: offsaddle, unsaddle] 2: load or burden; encumber; "he saddled me with that heavy responsibility" 3: impose a task upon, assign a responsibility to; "He charged her with cleaning up all the files over the weekend" [syn: charge, saddle, burden]
  • unsaddle
    v 1: remove the saddle from; "They unsaddled their mounts" [syn: unsaddle, offsaddle] [ant: saddle]
  • raddle
    n 1: a red iron ore used in dyeing and marking [syn: ruddle, reddle, raddle] v 1: twist or braid together, interlace [syn: raddle, ruddle] 2: mark or paint with raddle
  • staddle
    n 1: a base or platform on which hay or corn is stacked
  • sidesaddle
    adv 1: on or as if on a sidesaddle; "she rode sidesaddle" n 1: a saddle for a woman; rider sits with both feet on the same side of the horse
  • skedaddle
    n 1: a hasty flight v 1: run away, as if in a panic
  • gradel
  • stadel
  • cadell
  • caddell
  • chadel
  • fadel
  • kadel
  • madel
  • madl
  • radel
  • schadel
  • shadel
  • bestraddle
  • clapsaddle
  • spraddle
  • stadle
  • foresaddle

See also straddle definition and straddle synonyms