0 to (cause to) give a harsh (ringing) sound -- skrangle, klirre
The keys in his pocket jangled as he walked by.
The guitar is associated by many players with the jangle-rock sounds of bands from the 1960s and 1980s.
The etymological derivation of the term jangle is uncertain.
One also expects to hear the jangle of keys, but one prison feature we did not hope to find was the unlovely practice of slopping out.
I do not think the jangle on such an occasion would be confused with the proper ringing of the bells.
The rest of the papers take no interest and the facts about defence are presented in a jangle.
Until the invention of the distant bell, which could be jangled by a rope from far away, it was necessary to have servants within calling distance.
Their sound was characterized as sunny, melodic, jangling folk-rock.
The song is jangling and musical, and the call is a nasal "pheeeo".