wallowing means to roll around!
answered by Nick Caserta
In his old age, the man's bent toward crude expressions grew into a pathological wallowing in scatological language.
by flapping their ears or spraying themselves with water.
In order to regulate internal body temperature, the sweat mechanism allows an animal to quickly dissapate heat. Animals like a horse, cow or human will sweat with exercise or in hot temperatures. Reptiles & insects don't sweat as their body temperature is governed by the environmental temperature. Pigs on the other hand, are mammals and need to have water/humidity applied to the skin in order to help dissapate heat. This is the reason pigs are associated with wallowing in the mud. -Just racey In other words, you are an animal and you should be able to sweat so, yes. -QPerks
a lion mean mean a big fat cat
Do you mean zurvita
Pigs love wallowing in muck. Sarah was left wallowing in self-pity.
A pig enjoys wallowing in mud.
yes i enjoy wallowing in muyd
After receiving bad news, she decided to wallow in self-pity for the rest of the day.
because it is a mud-wallowing fish, of course!
Note that the term antonym is normally applied to a single word that has the opposite meaning of some other single word; once you start using phrases such as "wallowing in sadness" you can still suggest phrases with an opposite meaning, but a phrase is not an antonym. So, the opposite of wallowing in sadness would be getting on with your life, or living in the present.
Basically - food and wallowing. See the link below.
Pa-u Riders Hawaiian Islands - 1907 was released on: USA: February 1907
he was wasting his life away-wallowing in sorrows and stealing from them and she just couldn't take it anymore
They spend most of their days wallowing in water or mud, it keeps them cool and away from the hot sun
They're keeping themselves cool in the heat.
In his old age, the man's bent toward crude expressions grew into a pathological wallowing in scatological language.