dangle

Etymology

Uncertain, but likely of North Germanic origin, akin to Danish dingle, dangle, Swedish dangla (“to swing about”), Norwegian dangla, perhaps via North Frisian dangeln.

verb

  1. (intransitive) To hang loosely with the ability to swing.
    His feet would dangle in the water.
    Like most human activities, ballooning has sponsored heroes and hucksters and a good deal in between. For every dedicated scientist patiently recording atmospheric pressure and wind speed while shivering at high altitudes, there is a carnival barker with a bevy of pretty girls willing to dangle from a basket or parachute down to earth. 2013-06-07, David Simpson, “Fantasy of navigation”, in The Guardian Weekly, volume 188, number 26, page 36
  2. (intransitive, slang, ice hockey, lacrosse) The action of performing a move or deke with the puck in order to get past a defender or goalie; perhaps because of the resemblance to dangling the puck on a string.
    He dangled around three players and the goalie to score.
  3. (transitive) To hang or trail something loosely.
    I like to sit on the edge and dangle my feet in the water.
  4. (transitive, figurative, by extension) To put forth as a possibility.
    That it happens to have been produced under the imprimatur of Michael Bay dangles the possibility of poor taste, but unfortunately, bombast and conspicuous consumption are nowhere to be found. December 10 2020, Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, “The first movie inspired by the pandemic is here, and it sucks”, in The Onion AV Club
  5. (intransitive, dated) To trail or follow around.
    To dangle at the elbow of a wench who can't make up her mind to accept the common title of wife, till she has been courted a certain number of weeks — so the old blinker, her father, says. 1833, Miller's Modern Acting Drama
  6. (medicine, intransitive) Of a patient: to be positioned with the legs hanging over the edge of the bed.
    Record the time and duration of dangling, patient's pulse and respirations and patient's general tolerance of the procedure. […] The next step usually in getting the patient out of bed is sitting […] 1976, R. Winifred Heyward Johnson, Douglass W. Johnson, Introduction to Nursing Care, page 139
    [P]ivot to bring the patient's legs over the side of the bed. Be Smart! Stay with the patient as he dangles. 2012, Judith M. Wilkinson, Leslie S. Treas, Pocket Nursing Skills: What You Need to Know Now
  7. (medicine, transitive) To position (a patient) in this way.
    Using proper body mechanics for dangling a patient at the side of the bed. 2012, Judith M. Wilkinson, Leslie S. Treas, Pocket Nursing Skills: What You Need to Know Now

noun

  1. An agent of one intelligence agency or group who pretends to be interested in defecting or turning to another intelligence agency or group.
    The example of Oswald will show how the different operations of a dangle and a barium meal would work more efficiently together. 2017, Nancy Howell Lee, Peter Dale Scott, Bertram Gross, Forbidden Bookshelf's Resistance in America Collection
  2. (slang, ice hockey, lacrosse) The action of dangling; a series of complex stick tricks and fakes in order to defeat the defender in style.
    That was a sick dangle for a great goal!
  3. A dangling ornament or decoration.
    So her father wrote to Mrs. Herring, and one day she arrived and turned out to be a little, lean old lady with a dark brown mole on one leathery cheek and wearing a black bonnet decorated with jet dangles, like tiny fishing rods. 1941, Flora Thompson, Over to Candleford

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