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
If we do not have that, we are simply wallowing in the failures of the past.
I shall not take too much more time wallowing in past successes.
Now we can indulge both failings simultaneously, and many people are wallowing in short-term gloom.
He was wallowing self-righteously in self-pity—and for what?
In the last week we seem to have been wallowing in uncertainty and seemingly inadequate intelligence.
So often, when we have these debates, cease wallowing in mutual congratulation and start getting down to cases, the odd interesting and important point emerges.
Here in this country we are wallowing in welfare.
He comes here now wallowing in emotive tears about the hardship that widows are suffering.