Word of the Day, June 22: ‘Dribbling’

Word of the Day: DRIBBLING
Pronunciation: UK/ˈdrɪb.əl.ɪŋ/ or US/ˈdrɪb.əl.ɪŋ/
Meaning:
Dribbling means moving a ball while walking or running, especially in sports like basketball, football (soccer), hockey, and handball.
Examples for daily usage:
- Lionel Messi is famous for close-control dribbling.
- Stephen Curry is known for ball handling and quick movement.
Origin and history:
The word 'dribble' traces back to the mid-16th century. It originated as a frequentative form of the now-obsolete verb "drib", which itself is a variant of the word "drip".
In the mid-1500s, it referred to letting something fall in small drops or trickles (like water from a leaky faucet). It was also used archaically in archery to describe shooting an arrow short or wide of its target.
Cultural significance and modern usage:
By the mid-19th century, the term 'dribble' was adopted in association football (soccer) to describe the controlled, repetitive short touches a player uses to advance the ball past defenders. Shortly after, it became a foundational rule of basketball, where continuous bouncing is the only way a player can legally move while retaining possession.
The word "dribble" entered colloquial culture as a metaphor for slow, meaningless, or nonsensical speech because its original meaning was a slow, trickling release of liquid (like saliva or a leaky tap). This overlap frequently causes it to be used interchangeably with the older term "drivel".
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Interesting facts:
- In early football, “dribbling games” helped distinguish football from rugby.
- Basketball rules once limited how players could move while controlling the ball.
- Studies in sports science often connect dribbling with coordination, reaction speed, and decision-making.
Examples form literature:
- Sauce was dribbling out of the end of the taco and onto her hand.- Patina by Jason Reynolds
- Instead, they walked through a forest that seemed endless, and their progress was slow, as they had to step through kudzu and over trees and hop the occasional dribbling creek.- An Abundance of Katherines by John Green
- Only Nhamo remained, patiently changing the cloths beneath Ambuya's hips and dribbling water into her mouth.- A Girl Named Disaster by Nancy Farmer
- He was dribbling a soccer ball with his brother on the front lawn of their house.- The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
Synonyms:
- Trickling
- Scant
- Sparse
- Scanty
Antonyms:
- Copious
- Lavish
- Profuse
- Rotous
- Ample
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