¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Giggled
1. giggle [v] - See also: giggle
Lexicographical Neighbors of Giggled
Literary usage of Giggled
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Hawthorne and His Circle by Julian Hawthorne (1903)
"... girl who giggled all the time—It gnawed me terribly— A Scotch terrier named
Towsey—A sentiment of diplomatic etiquette—London as a physical ..."
2. Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town by Cory Doctorow (2006)
"She giggled and punched him in the arm. "Saturday, then!" she called as she ran
off. ... giggled ..."
3. Childhood Verse by Walter Anthony Ryan (1903)
"Oh, she giggled and she giggled, Did this foolish little Pearl, And from that
day, everybody Knew her as the Giggle Girl. ..."
4. The Windsor Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly for Men and Women (1919)
"Sergeant Africa giggled anxiously, and his hands fluttered in the stones. ...
He giggled again. " Lord, shall I be beaten because I made a hole in the hut ..."
5. A Young Girl's Diary by Sigmund Freud (1921)
"In Frau Doktor St's lesson in the First, some of the girls giggled at the same
thing and she went on ... But really all the girls had not giggled, for ex. ..."
6. Dramatists of the Present Day by Thomas Purnell (1871)
"Two people in the stalls giggled; another thought if he did not giggle he might
be marked as a man who could not understand wit, and he giggled too; ..."