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drab
dribs and drabs
Insignificant, skimpy, and/or piecemeal amounts. A: "Have you been able to get any work lately?" B: "Just some dribs and drabs to keep me ticking along, but nothing substantial."
in dribs and drabs
in small portions; bit by bit. I'll have to pay you what I owe you in dribs and drabs. The whole story is being revealed in dribs and drabs.
in dribs and drabs
in small amounts She says she keeps getting information in dribs and drabs.
in dribs and drabs
in small amounts or a few at a time We could only afford to pay the builder in dribs and drabs. The hostages have been released in dribs and drabs.
dribs and drabs
Bits and pieces, negligible amounts, as in There's not much left, just some dribs and drabs of samples. The noun drib is thought to be a shortening of driblet, for "drop" or "tiny quantity," dating from the early 1700s, whereas drab meaning "a small sum of money" dates from the early 1800s.
in dribs and drabs
mod. in small portions; bit by bit. I’ll have to pay you what I owe you in dribs and drabs.
Common Names:
Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
Briscoe | | BRIS-ko | English (Rare) |
Quirina | | - | Late Roman |
NoÉ | | no-E (French, Spanish) | French, Spanish, Portuguese |
Rohese | | - | Medieval English |
Rupert | | RUY-pərt (Dutch), ROO-pərt (English), RUW-pert (Polish) | German, Dutch, English, Polish |
Artjoms | | - | Latvian |