1. lolling - Noun
2. lolling - Verb
of Loll
Source: Webster's dictionaryLooking at the past is like lolling in a rocking chair. It is so relaxing and you can rock back and forth on the porch, and never go forward. Martha Graham
The gentleman lolling back in the chaise was neither dashingly handsome nor yet unbearably ugly, neither too stout nor yet too thin; it could not be claimed he was old but he was no stripling, either. His arrival in the town created no stir and was not marked by anything out of the ordinary. Nikolai Gogol
Generally I get up at around 7. But oftentimes, I'll be lolling in bed a little bit earlier - sometimes as early as 5:45 - filing in my mind all the things I have to get done. Which is, of course, totally unproductive. Mo Rocca
The nutty luster of tahini, the wafts of cinnamon and earthy za'atar, vegetable salads lolling in olive oil, spiced lamb in every permutation: Their prominence in our national culinary identity is overdue. Source: Internet
The gigantic heads lolling, slipping overboard. Source: Internet
“You should take off your shoes,” she said and kicked off her boots, the tongues lolling as if they were hot and tired, full of thirst. Source: Internet