0 present participle of huddle
1 to come close together in a group, or to hold your arms and legs close to your body, especially because of cold or fear:
Huddling for warmth, they chewed lumps of pemmican and raw bacon; without fuel there was no water to drink.
Obviously the shock was so great that they are now huddling together somewhere trying to create another policy on something.
Everybody thought "collective security" meant huddling together for common action, whereas it meant the security one hoped to obtain by common action.
That creates the impression in the public mind—not so wrongly—of a huddling together at the centre.
The result was the tenements from which we have not even yet escaped, the huddling of our people in towns and all those horrors.
Are we to go on for ever huddling more closely around the fire without replenishing the fuel?
He spoke of the moors and of people huddling together for warmth to survive.
The new criminal justice boards, which have been set up on a county-wide basis, need local one-stop shops, rather than huddling together away from their customers and the public.