squidge

squidge

(skwɪdʒ)
vb
informal to squash or squeeze (something soft) or (of something soft) to become squashed
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Someone sprints round the corner and runs up to your entrance in the hope you'll squidge up a bit further.
"We immediately had an appointment with our consultant who assured us he would do everything in his power to help us but heartbreakingly his powers failed and we lost our darling 'Little Squidge' who was to be our final attempt at becoming a family."
Gently squidge it between your thumb and finger - does it shift?
The packaging is emblazoned with saucy slogans such as "a cracking pair" and "squidge my cheeks".
The sweets were sold in the 'novelty' section of the shop and the packaging featured phrases such as "a cracking pair" and "squidge my cheeks",reports The Mirror.
The budget chain's 50p "over-16s" Boobies and Booty sweets have slogans like "squidge my cheeks" and "a cracking pair".
The latter had been affectionately nicknamed the royal "squidgy" or "squidge," leading the press to call the phone hacking scandal "Squidgygate."
Spoon the salmon mixture and kimchi into the tacos, then squidge some Japanese mayo over each one.
Open for a limited time only,Disney fanscan indulge in a spread of delicious delights atCutter and Squidge cafAaAaAeA@in Soh
Sadie Coles HQ, meanwhile, presents Urs Fischer's spectacular plasticine version of Rodin's The Kiss, a work whose fidelity to the original will gradually diminish over the course of the fair through the various touches of visitors, who are allowed irreverently to squidge and poke the sculpture.
I'm always sniffing around to see if there's something I can squidge in quickly.