1. warbling - Noun
2. warbling - Verb
of Warble
Source: Webster's dictionaryAbove them, the hard black exterior and warbling columns of smoke were like a second sky. Source: Internet
And that’s where Green’s garnishing threads of warbling pedal steel comes in, giving an inescapable old-world/trad-folk feel to the arrangement, but flexibly responding in his curving phrases to the individual voices and ideas of Palmer and Bertos. Source: Internet
But don’t expect to find them warbling down on the docks in Oak Bluffs; eight years ago a disgruntled listener famously shoved a member mid-song into the water. Source: Internet
He was a Catholic mystic who adored birds and their warbling, and since many people whose taste I respect love his music, I figure my lack of enthusiasm is my fault. Source: Internet
They burst noisily from the grasses on all sides, warbling and clumsily taking wing, if only temporarily, and I could see what easy targets they must make for the shooting parties that flock here at weekends. Source: Internet
I got most of their language right, and found an explanation for some really strange warbling vocalizations they have when I come home from work! Source: Internet