croodle
English
    
    
Verb
    
croodle (third-person singular simple present croodles, present participle croodling, simple past and past participle croodled)
- (UK, dialect, obsolete) To cower or cuddle together, as from fear or cold; to lie close and snug together, as pigs in straw.
-  a. 1810, Robert Tannahill, The Wood O' Craigie Lea:- Far ben thy dark green plantin's shade
 The cushat croodles am'rously
 
-  1858 January, Charles Kingsley, “My Winter-Garden”, in Frasers Magazine:- Oh! that I had wings-not as a dove , to fly home to its nest and croodle there
 
-  1898, William Edwards Tirebuck, Meg of the Scarlet Fool:- Mrs. Dootson bridged the other half, and, croodling down to Meg's height, she somewhat forced the friendship
 
 
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- (UK, dialect, obsolete) To fawn or coax.
Etymology 2
    
Onomatopoeic "croo" + -le.
Verb
    
croodle (third-person singular simple present croodles, present participle croodling, simple past and past participle croodled)
Noun
    
croodle (plural croodles)
- Such a bird vocalisation, especially that given by doves.
-  1888, Gordon Stables, In Touch with Nature: Tales and Sketches from the Life, page 46:- [A]nd no sound falls on my ears, except the distant roar of a passing train, the song of linnets, and croodle of turtle-dove and cushat.
 
-  1997, Aidan Higgins, Flotsam and Jetsam, page 265:- [A] third-storey apartment under the eaves loud with the croodles and canoodling of amorous pigeons.
 
 
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References
    
croodle in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913
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