0 present 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
Ian never really forgave himself for not being with his dying wife and admitted to ' wallowing ' in selfish anger for a long time.
This missive is highly unwelcome to me, for it shows that our country is wallowing in debt.
Politicians of all shapes, sizes and colours are wallowing in a warm bath of anti-commercialism.
They presume to use the workforce as scapegoats, challenging their acquired rights and almost implying that they are wallowing in affluence.
We had no intention of crying over spilt milk, and certainly not of wallowing in it.
All of them are achieving higher returns than us, while we are wallowing in chronic recession.
We are wallowing in the trap of the double deficit.
He comes here now wallowing in emotive tears about the hardship that widows are suffering.