0 past simple and past participle of wobble --
1 to (cause something to) shake or move from side to side in a way that shows poor balance: --
2 to be uncertain what to do or to change repeatedly between two opinions: --
The government can't afford to wobble on this issue.
Both of them have wobbled.
Long ago, when we were learning to ride a bicycle, we may remember our experience as we wobbled along.
They have not thought out their strategy, and they have not been able to apply their minds to it because they have wobbled around under pressure from their diehards.
Of course, the patient wobbled.
It may be fair to sum it up by saying that it wobbled slightly against it.
I do not say it was the will of the people that wobbled.
He has wobbled about on this issue like a demented political yo-yo.
On this issue he has wobbled all over the road.