English language

How to pronounce wobbler in English?

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Type Words
Type of thing
Derivation wobble

Examples of wobbler

wobbler
And high-school-level classes, taken by fewer than 2,700 students, are a wobbler.
From the sfgate.com
Watson hit a wobbler that Marcou redirected between goalie Nevin Hamilton's pads.
From the bostonherald.com
Forced to do it again, Lindell kicked a wobbler that hit the right upright.
From the dailyherald.com
He took a wobbler just after the show and collapsed on the studio floor.
From the metro.co.uk
It steams straight down the lane, knocking down every pin until even the last wobbler succumbs.
From the canberratimes.com.au
Moderate Republican Dale Swenson of Wichita was one wobbler who came down against the power plant.
From the kansas.com
The scan indicated that Isaac had wobbler syndrome, an instability in the vertebrae of the neck.
From the timesunion.com
In 2005, Dr. Jockusch's team managed to identify the mutation responsible for the wobbler phenotype.
From the sciencedaily.com
Among them was a wobbler that was tipped before Keith Fitzhugh grabbed it for the first interception.
From the kentucky.com
More examples
  • Something that wobbles
  • Wobbler is a Norwegian progressive rock band formed in 1999.
  • Plugs are a popular type of hard-bodied fishing lure. They are widely known by a number of other names depending on the country and region. Such names include crankbait, wobbler, minnow, shallow-diver and deep-diver. ...
  • A stone that rocks from side to side as it travels because it is not resting on its running surface; A case that could go either way depending on factors that cannot be controlled; A fishing lure made to resemble a prey fish and that wobbles in the water; plug, minnow; Sudden unexpected ...
  • (Wobblers) Compression of the cervical spinal cord caused by caudal cervical vertebral malformation-malarticulation or instability
  • (Wobblers) have a center of mass that is not in the exact center of the ball or is loose within the ball. When putted, the ball will move unpredictably off the intended line.
  • A neurological disease due to compression of the spinal cord. Seen principally in 2-year-olds and 3-year-olds.
  • A international term used to describe a jointed plug or crank bait.
  • A control found on an electron microscope that sets up an automatic over focus-under focus loop. If the objective lens aperture is not correctly aligned with the electron beam the image will be seen to wobble back and forth under this regime.