1. prodding - Noun
2. prodding - Verb
Derived from prod
of Prod
Source: Webster's dictionaryIt's different when you're an actor and playing a part, but when it's just you, you feel immensely vulnerable have strangers prodding and prying. Helena Bonham Carter
Wait until the evening before opening night. Nothing primes inspiration more than necessity, whether it be the presence of a copyist waiting for your work or the prodding of an impresario tearing his hair. In my time, all the impresarios in Italy were bald at thirty. Gioachino Rossini
The mace prodded Will in the back again. That little habit was starting to annoy him and he was tempted to take the weapon from the sergeant major and do a little prodding of his own. John Flanagan
As remote as the rings of Saturn... A man with his stubby million-rand finger perennially prodding the public's pulse, his eyes constantly roving the horizons of the future, Kerzner has the power of a Prometheus unbound. Jani Allan
the ceaseless prodding got on his nerves Source: Internet
Abraham is again millimetres away from prodding home. Source: Internet