Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
waddy .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Amid discussions about a house purchase by Lansing, Laganiere's back ailments and their golf arrangements, and other matters, the pair talks about sharing hydrocodone, which they called "waddies," according to the transcripts.
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Amid discussions about a house purchase by Lansing, Laganiere's back ailments and their golf arrangements, and other matters, the pair talks about sharing hydrocodone, which they called "waddies," according to the transcripts.
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Over the course of a 36-hour siege, the enraged waddies put 400 bullet holes in the house (legend says a total of 4,000 shots) without touching Baca.
David E. 2009
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After leaving us they had attacked him, throwing several boomerangs and waddies at him; he had only one barrel of his gun loaded with shot; they all spread out and surrounded him, gradually approaching from all sides.
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The terrified native remained motionless, allowing our black to ride within a few yards of him, when, in an instant, he threw down his waddies, and jumped up into
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At first they seemed inclined for mischief, making all manner of gestures and shaking their boomerangs, waddies, etc.
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There were three worleys on the rising ground, with waddies, boomerangs, spears, and a number of broken dishes scattered round them.
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In describing his first trail drive, James H. Cook says: When Mr. Roberts informed me that I was to be one of his trail waddies, I immediately moved all my personal belongings over to his camp.
THE AMERICAN WEST DEE BROWN 2007
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When the natives discover one of these nests they surround it, treading firmly round the base in order to secure any outlet; they then remove the top of the cone, and, as the mice endeavour to escape, they kill them with the waddies which they use with such unfailing skill.
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They also saw a lot of shields, spears, waddies, etc., which the natives had deposited under a bush.
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