Doodle

Noun

 * 1)  A fool, a simpleton, a mindless person.
 * 2) A small mindless sketch, etc.
 * 3)  Penis.

Verb

 * 1) To draw or scribble (something) aimlessly

Thesaurus
ass, bagpipe, beat, beguile the time, bilk, black and white, blow, blow a horn, born fool, brouillon, buffoon, bugle, burn daylight, carillon, cartoon, chalk, charcoal, charcoal drawing, cheat, chiaroscuro, chisel, clarion, clown, color, consume time, copy, cozen, crayon, crosshatch, dabble, dally, dash off, daub, dawdle, defraud, delineate, delineation, depict, design, diagram, diddle, dillydally, do, donkey, double-tongue, draft, draw, drawing, ebauche, egregious ass, esquisse, fife, figure of fun, flimflam, flute, fool, footle, fribble, fritter away time, graph, gyp, hatch, idiot, ignoramus, imbecile, jackass, jerk, kill time, lag, limn, line drawing, linger, lip, loiter, lollygag, lose time, lunatic, mess, mess around, milksop, mooncalf, nincompoop, ninny, overreach, paint, paint a picture, pass the time, pastel, pen-and-ink, pencil, pencil drawing, perfect fool, picture, picturize, piddle, pipe, poke, portray, potter, puddle, putter, rough copy, rough draft, rough outline, schmuck, scrabble, scratch, scrawl, scribble, scumble, shade, silhouette, silver-print drawing, sinopia, sketch, softhead, sop, sound, stencil, study, stupid ass, tinker, tint, tomfool, tongue, toot, tootle, trace, tracing, trifle, triple-tongue, trumpet, tweedle, vignette, waste time, whistle, wind, wind the horn, zany

Etymology
Influenced by dawdle:, from dudeln:, from dudel:, from Czech or Polish dudy:, from  düdük:.

The word doodle first appeared in the early 17th century to mean a fool or simpleton. German variants of the etymon include Dudeltopf, Dudentopf, Dudenkopf, Dude and Dödel. American English dude may be a derivation of doodle.

The meaning "fool, simpleton" is intended in the song title "Yankee Doodle", originally sung by British colonial troops prior to the American Revolutionary War. This is also the origin of the early eighteenth century verb to doodle, meaning "to swindle or to make a fool of". The modern meaning emerged in the 1930s either from this meaning or from the verb "to dawdle", which since the seventeenth century has had the meaning of wasting time or being lazy.

Noun

 * Bulgarian:
 * Russian: болван


 * Bulgarian: драскулка
 * Czech: čmáranice
 * Finnish: riipustus
 * French: griffonnage,


 * German: Gekritzel, Kritzelei
 * Russian: каракули
 * Spanish:
 * Turkish: karalama


 * German: Penis


 * Turkish: penis

Derived terms

 * doodlebug
 * sardoodledom
 * Yankee Doodle

Verb

 * Finnish:
 * French: ,
 * German:
 * Norwegian: drodle


 * Polish: bazgrać
 * Russian: чиркать
 * Spanish: