natter/ˈnætɚ/EtymologyFrom a Northern England dialectal variant of gnatter (also knatter) ("to chatter, grumble; nibble away at"), ultimately of imitative origin. Cognate with German Low German gnattern (“to mumble, grumble, be grouchy”).natter means mindless and irrelevant chatter. Lexicurio rates it Distinctive — a strength score of 67 out of 100.nounMindless and irrelevant chatter.verbTo talk casually; to discuss unimportant matters.“What are you guys nattering about? You're clearly not following the meeting!”To nag.