"Wrigglers" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
People or animals that move or walk unsteadily, especially in a nervous or fidgety manner.
Example: "The baby wrigglers in the toddler class were getting restless."
It can also refer to specific types of small insects, such as wrigglers (the larvae of mosquitoes and other insects that live in water and wriggle their bodies).
Alternatively, it can be used to describe something that moves or wriggles, like a wriggler (a type of fishing lure that resembles a worm and has a wriggling action when retrieved).
Wretches refers to:<br><br> People who are wretched, suffering, or miserable.<br> A person or people who are greatly distressed or unhappy.<br><br>Example: "The refugees were living in poor conditions, growing wretches of humanity."<br><br>Synonyms: wretched, miserable, woe, wretchedness.<br><br>Origin: From Old English "writhe," meaning twisted or contorted. The term implies a severe or agonizing state.
WRf can have a few possible meanings depending on the context. <br><br>1. WRf can be an abbreviation for Water Resources Forum.<br>2. In Scandinavian countries like Sweden, Norway, or Finland, it's an abbreviation for Work Relief Fund, which is a type of unemployment benefit or social welfare initiative.
To twist or move back and forth in a quick, irregular motion, typically in an effort to free oneself from a tight or confined space.
To twist or turn suddenly and quickly, often in a way that is difficult to control. <br><br>Example: She wriggled free from her seat and stood up.
Someone or something that wriggles, a wriggly or wiggly creature, such as a worm or a snake; a person, esp. a child, who fidgets or squirms in their seat or out of their usual position, esp. in a way that is annoying.
I couldn't find any definition for the word "wringbolt". It's possible that it's a made-up or uncommon term.