squattle

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English

Etymology

From squat +‎ -le?

Verb

squattle (third-person singular simple present squattles, present participle squattling, simple past and past participle squattled)

  1. (intransitive, Scotland) To squat or sprawl; to duck into concealment.
    • 1821, John Galt, Annals of the parish: or, the chronicle of Dalmailing , page 56:
      They tarried about a week among us, living in tents, with their little ones squattling among the litter []
    • 1877, John Timbs, James Mason, Year Book of Facts in Science and Art, page 46:
      Whenever they got to the water they threw themselves down and squattled into it. The moment they were in the water they acted just as if they were fishes.
    • 1900, Richard Doddridge Blackmore, Dariel: A Romance of Surrey, page 425:
      He spread his face out in such a manner that there was nothing left but mouth; as a young cuckoo in a sparrow's nest, when his stepmother cannot satisfy him, squattles his empty body down, and distends himself into one enormous gape.