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verb

diddle

DIH-duhl
verb
1
To cheat or swindle someone, especially out of money.
"The contractor diddled him out of a few hundred pounds."
2
To waste time doing nothing productive; to fiddle around.
"Stop diddling and get the report finished."

How to Use Diddle

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishTo cheat someone in a small way, or to waste time fooling around instead of working.

When to use it

Informal.

Common pairings
diddle someone out of money diddle around

Word Forms

diddled past tense, diddles plural, diddles singular

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The contractor _____ him out of a few hundred pounds.

Etymology

Traces back to dialectal English words for "to trick" and "to totter," possibly reinforced by the swindling character Jeremy Diddler in an early-1800s play.

Related Words

Rhymes for diddle

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial