• Dandle

    Origin

    Compare German dändeln ("to trifle, dandle"), Old Dutch and Provincial German danten, German Tand ("trifle, prattle"); Scots dandill ("dander, to go about idly, to trifle").

    Full definition of dandle

    Verb

    1. To move up and down on one’s knee or in one’s arms, in affectionate play, as an infant.
      • "you will nurse and be carried on her arm and dandled on her knees." – Isaiah 66:12 (NIV)
    2. To treat with fondness, as if a child; to fondle; to toy with; to pet.
      • They have put me in a silk night-gown and gaudy fool's cap, and make me now and then stand in the window with it. I am ashamed to be dandled thus, and cannot look in the glass without blushing to see myself turned into such a pretty little master. – Joseph Addison
      • The book, thus dandled into popularity by bishops and good ladies, contained many pieces of nursery eloquence. – Francis Jeffrey, Lord Jeffrey
    3. (obsolete) To play with; to put off or delay by trifles; to wheedle.
      • Captains do so dandle their doings, and dally in the service, as it they would not have the enemy subdued. – Edmund Spenser

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