0 past simple and past participle of dribble
2 to have liquid slowly coming out of your mouth:
Babies dribble constantly.
3 in football or hockey, to move a ball along the ground with repeated small kicks or hits, or (in basketball) to move a ball by repeatedly hitting it against the floor with your hand:
Has the edge of the sheet been dribbled on?
Yes, the edge of the sheet has been dribbled on.
No, it has already been dribbled on.
The sheet has been dribbled on.
I should regret it very much if parts or the whole of the review dribbled out.
I suspect that that is why we are having these retrograde changes dribbled out bit by bit, in order to soften the total impact.
Yet it has been a series of measures which has been dribbled out.
I am glad that the dogs have dribbled and that we are having this argument.