0 present participle of shamble --
1 to walk slowly and awkwardly, without lifting your feet correctly: --
In consequence of a somewhat shambling, awkward gait, and the habit of carrying his head down in a thoughtful attitude, he seemed less of stature than he really was.
Bradburn notes that the girl's instincts were on target as the printed interview with the doggy pickanins of the movies was a shambling sometimes condescending affair.
Better still, he had become a sorcerer of phenomenal power, while his brother was now but a shambling automaton.
One night he hears a shambling on his porch.
She catches sight of a shadowy figure shambling toward the lodge!
Keen to distance themselves from the shambling scene, the band earned a reputation for haughtiness.
However, their shows were received positively by critics, who described the band's onstage presence as an aural and visual onslaught of vicious, shambling noise.
They walk in a slow, shambling motion, with their feet being set down in a noisy, flapping motion.