Definition of Huddler in English :

Define Huddler in English

Huddler meaning in English

Meaning of Huddler in English

Pronunciation of Huddler in English

Huddler pronunciation in English

Pronounce Huddler in English

Huddler

see synonyms of huddler

Noun

1. huddler

a member of a huddle

2. huddler

a person who crouches

Example Sentences:
'low huddlers against the wind'

WordNet Lexical Database for English. Princeton University. 2010.


Huddler

see synonyms of huddler
noun
1. 
a heaped or crowded mass of people or things
2. informal
a private or impromptu conference (esp in the phrase go into a huddle)
verb
3. 
to crowd or cause to crowd or nestle closely together
4. (often foll by up)
to draw or hunch (oneself), as through cold
5. (intransitive) informal
to meet and confer privately
6. (transitive) mainly British
to do (something) in a careless way
7. (transitive) rare
to put on (clothes) hurriedly

Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers


Huddler

see synonyms of huddler
verb intransitiveWord forms: ˈhuddled or ˈhuddling
1. 
to crowd, push, or nestle close together, as cows do in a storm
2. 
to draw the limbs close to the body, as from cold
to huddle under a blanket
3.  US, Informal
to hold a private, informal conference
4.  US, American Football
to gather in a huddle
verb transitive
5. 
to crowd close together
6. 
to hunch or draw (oneself) up
7. 
to do, put, or make hastily and carelessly
8. 
to push or thrust in a hurried or disordered manner
noun
9. 
a confused crowd or heap of persons or things
10. 
confusion; muddle; jumble
11.  US, Informal
a private, informal conference
12.  US, American Football
a grouping of a team behind the line of scrimmage to receive signals before a play

Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.


Huddler

see synonyms of huddler
n.
1. A densely packed group or crowd, as of people or animals.
2. Football A brief gathering of a team's players behind the line of scrimmage to receive instructions for the next play.
3. A small private conference or meeting.
v. hud·dled, hud·dling, hud·dles
v.intr.
1. To crowd together, as from cold or fear.
2. To draw or curl one's limbs close to one's body: huddled under the blanket while watching television.
3. Football To gather in a huddle.
4. Informal To gather together for conference or consultation: During the crisis, the president's national security advisers huddled.
v.tr.
1. To cause to crowd together.
2. To draw (oneself) together in a crouch.
3. Chiefly British To arrange, do, or make hastily or carelessly.

The American Heritage ® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition copyright ©2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.