0 present participle of shamble
1 to walk slowly and awkwardly, without lifting your feet correctly:
Was ever such shuffling and shambling machinery devised?
This problem follows us like some great shambling creature of evil which we do not seem able to get rid of.
We had a shambling, fumbling, largely irrelevant and, at one point, degrading speech.
Indeed, it is being propounded by the same people who made a mess of the programme that is still shambling along.
Today, we have heard no more and no less than a shambling rant.
This character is an isolated survivor of an infection which has turned the world's population into aggressive, shambling mutants.
Another reviewer described them as a shambling wreck of a psychedelic post-punk band.
They walk in a slow, shambling motion, with their feet being set down in a noisy, flapping motion.