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Fine Dictionary

dribbler

WordNet
  1. (n) dribbler
    a person who dribbles; he needs a bib" "that baby is a dribbler"
  2. (n) dribbler
    a basketball player who is dribbling the ball to advance it
Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  1. (n) dribbler
    A weak person; a driveler.
  2. (n) dribbler
    In foot-ball, one who ‘dribbles,’ or kicks the ball lightly along the ground. See dribble, transitive verb, 3.
Usage in the news

The Doris Miller Family Y Little Dribblers 9-10, 11-12 and 13-14 teams are competing in the Little Dribbler regional tournament in Willis this weekend. acotrib.com

They also missed the second of the Cougars ' blocked punts when Michael Bowlin couldn't field a horrible dribbler of a snap and was snuffed by the Bruins. kitsapsun.com

Dizzy Grant, star dribbler for the Harlem Globetrotters, and his dog Saber are the newest faces of "Show Your Soft Side," a promotional campaign created by the City of Baltimore to combat animal abuse. dogchannel.com

Wear Hornets ' Anthony Davis's trademark brow as a show of support for the hometown dribblers. blog.nola.com

See the Jan 29 edition of the Optic-Herald for the Little Dribblers score card. mt-vernon.com

We've seen some truly horrendous first pitch efforts over the years, from the "what did you expect" dribbler that Mariah Carey uncorked, to the shameful 10-footer that NBA star John Wall recently unleashed. 1390thefan.com

Usage in literature

He's a dandy dribbler. "The Major" by Ralph Connor

Deceased played in two Internationals, including that of 1872, and no finer dribbler ever toed a ball. "Scottish Football Reminiscences and Sketches" by David Drummond Bone