0 past simple and past participle of wallow
1 (especially of some animals) to lie or roll around slowly in deep, wet earth, sand, or water:
a hippopotamus wallowing in mud
They wallowed in subscience and sermons; the adolescent veered from evil to saintliness, without enough good, rational, explorable territory in between.
What better tribute to his efforts than to 'rescue' his earlier sensual poems from the eroticism in which they wallowed?
It wallowed between boom in war-time and slump in peacetime.
Rarely can a party have so wallowed in the irresponsibility of opposition.
In fact, we have fairly wallowed in them.
The plain truth is that too many people wallowed delightedly in a system in which asset stripping was acceptable.
They finished second in 1996 and again in 1997, but by the end of the decade had wallowed away to mid table.
She wallowed there in the trough of the swells, continuing to ship water.