widdle

widdle

(ˈwɪdəl)
vb
(Physiology) (intr) to urinate
n
1. (Physiology) urine
2. (Physiology) an act or instance of urinating
[C20: from piddle]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

widdle


Past participle: widdled
Gerund: widdling

Imperative
widdle
widdle
Present
I widdle
you widdle
he/she/it widdles
we widdle
you widdle
they widdle
Preterite
I widdled
you widdled
he/she/it widdled
we widdled
you widdled
they widdled
Present Continuous
I am widdling
you are widdling
he/she/it is widdling
we are widdling
you are widdling
they are widdling
Present Perfect
I have widdled
you have widdled
he/she/it has widdled
we have widdled
you have widdled
they have widdled
Past Continuous
I was widdling
you were widdling
he/she/it was widdling
we were widdling
you were widdling
they were widdling
Past Perfect
I had widdled
you had widdled
he/she/it had widdled
we had widdled
you had widdled
they had widdled
Future
I will widdle
you will widdle
he/she/it will widdle
we will widdle
you will widdle
they will widdle
Future Perfect
I will have widdled
you will have widdled
he/she/it will have widdled
we will have widdled
you will have widdled
they will have widdled
Future Continuous
I will be widdling
you will be widdling
he/she/it will be widdling
we will be widdling
you will be widdling
they will be widdling
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been widdling
you have been widdling
he/she/it has been widdling
we have been widdling
you have been widdling
they have been widdling
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been widdling
you will have been widdling
he/she/it will have been widdling
we will have been widdling
you will have been widdling
they will have been widdling
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been widdling
you had been widdling
he/she/it had been widdling
we had been widdling
you had been widdling
they had been widdling
Conditional
I would widdle
you would widdle
he/she/it would widdle
we would widdle
you would widdle
they would widdle
Past Conditional
I would have widdled
you would have widdled
he/she/it would have widdled
we would have widdled
you would have widdled
they would have widdled
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
Translations

widdle

(inf)
vipinkeln (inf)
n to go for a widdle (hum)pinkeln gehen (inf)
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007
References in periodicals archive ?
In a post, they said:"This young man chose to jump our gate at 2am, take a widdle in the corner, pull down our wind chime, disperse some rubbish from bin bags and then run off with our brush, obviously feeling pretty chuffed with himself.
But she hadn't finished:"He does occasionally widdle on the carpet.
As a boy, Kevins mum called him 'Kewie' (Aww, Widdle Kevvie, his dad mocked), but by high school he renamed himself 'Kev', shortening it all the way back to something cool.
However, when Private Widdle (Charles Hawtrey) is found wearing underpants the Khasi of Khalabar (Kenneth Williams) planned to use the information to incite an anti-British rebellion.
THIS little girl got herself in a widdle spot of bother when her head got stuck in a potty seat.
As a devout believer in Open Covenants, Openly Entered Into, I will not lie to you from the git-go: I do not merely hate all awards shows, I wish to see them beheaded, stakes driven through their black and corrupted widdle hearts, and to see the decapitated remains buried at a crossroads come midnight.
On the new stage at STARMAKERZ - (from left) Paul Scott, Simon Hamilton of UKSE and Adam Sayers with 16 year old Craig Widdle and Serenity Scott, 10, of Middlesbrough
Lang may your elbuck jink an' didle, To cheat you through the weary widdle O' this vile Warl: Until ye on a cummock dridle, A gray-hair'd Carl!
It is interesting to see that no fewer than five of these words also provide OED's first occurrences in English: ouerance, pickillis, primacie, stifhartit and widdle. This incidentally confirms the perceived value of the Catechism in the history of English in general.