- wattle
- wattle [wät′'l]n.[ME wattel < OE watul, a hurdle, woven twigs < ? IE * wedh-, to knit, bind < base * (a)we- > WEAVE]1. a sort of woven work made of sticks intertwined with twigs or branches, used for walls, fences, and roofs2. [Brit. Dial.]a) a stick, rod, twig, or wandb) a hurdle or framework made of sticks, rods, etc.3. [pl.] rods or poles used as the support of a thatched roof4. Austral. any of various acacias: the flexible branches were much used by early settlers for making wattles5. a fleshy, wrinkled, often brightly colored piece of skin which hangs from the chin or throat of certain birds, as the turkey, or of some lizards6. a barbel of a fish7. [often pl.] a fold or pouch of flesh hanging from the neck or lower part of the jawadj.made of or roofed with wattle or wattlesvt.wattled, wattling1. to twist or intertwine (sticks, twigs, branches, etc.) so as to form an interwoven structure or fabric2. to construct (a fence) by intertwining sticks or twigs3. to build of, or roof, fence, etc. with, wattle
English World dictionary. V. Neufeldt. 2014.