0 present participle of riddle
1 to make a lot of holes in something:
The anti-aircraft guns riddled the plane's wings with bullets.
Such riddling acknowledges the commodifications of aestheticism, while celebrating its capacity to evoke beauty for its own sake.
Reading and riddling : the role of riddle appreciation in understanding and improving poor text comprehension in children.
In perhaps the most striking of the essay's tableaux, "charm" is less in evidence than an abundance of riddling details.
Such organic proximity to flesh means that music touches all too intimately on the body's nervous system, thus riddling the means and ends, the material and immaterial properties of art.
The essence of riddling is to push language beyond its customary rule-governed categories through the bold use of metaphor, paronomasia, personification and any of a number of other rhetorical stratagems.
Basin riddling occurs when these sets also contain a dense set of periodic orbits which are repelling in the transverse direction.
The lady was riddling with an instrument used for riddling fires which, in global terms, is called a riddler.
She was riddling her fire and had a notice served on her by her local authority.