TRICKLE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary To trickle is also to happen gradually and in small numbers: After the hurricane, all the telephones were out, and it was some time before reports of damage began to trickle in
Trickle-down economics - Wikipedia Trickle-down economics, also known as trickle-down theory and the horse-and-sparrow theory, [1] is a term, most-often used pejoratively, to describe government economic policies that disproportionately favor the upper tier of the economic spectrum (wealthy individuals and large corporations) The term has been used broadly by critics of supply-side economics to refer to taxing and spending
trickle verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . . [intransitive, transitive] trickle (something) + adv prep to go, or to make something go, somewhere slowly or gradually People began trickling into the hall News is starting to trickle out Definition of trickle verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
Trickle - definition of trickle by The Free Dictionary To flow or fall in drops or in a thin stream 2 To move or proceed slowly or bit by bit: The audience trickled in To cause to trickle n 1 The act or condition of trickling 2 A slow, small, or irregular quantity that moves, proceeds, or occurs intermittently
trickle - WordReference. com Dictionary of English to come, go, or pass bit by bit, slowly, or irregularly: The guests trickled out of the room v t to cause to trickle n a trickling flow or stream a small, slow, or irregular quantity of anything coming, going, or proceeding: a trickle of visitors throughout the day