wraggle
Definitions
verb
To wag about with a wiggling motion.
I going, he followed, and following fingered me, just as your worship does now; but I struggled and straggled, and wriggled and wraggled, and at last cried vale, valete, as I do now, with this fragment Of a rhyme,
We must not fall into the spell of hubris and then justify our cimes and double standards while wraggling our fingers at those we disagree with for doing the same thing.
verb
To noisily try to convince others.
"The crisis of Olympia's destiny will come and pass," Stevens fretted, "and the die be cast against her while her people are wraggling over... 'bonds.'"
'The business of water transportation knows no haggling and wraggling', said the boatman blatantly.
To pester.
They represent the first record of Fur Seals in this area and it is intented that meteorological and hydrological conditions in the Tasman Sea during austral winter have wraggled to the north young Fur Seals from probably south-australian populations.
Remember you're tired from wraggling with those nasty customers all day, or pounding out dull, business letters.