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waver
1[wey-ver]
verb (used without object)
to sway to and fro; flutter.
Foliage wavers in the breeze.
to flicker or quiver, as light.
A distant beam wavered and then disappeared.
become unsteady; begin to fail or give way.
When she heard the news her courage wavered.
to shake or tremble, as the hands or voice.
Her voice wavered.
Synonyms: quiverto feel or show doubt, indecision, etc.; vacillate.
He wavered in his determination.
(of things) to fluctuate or vary.
Prices wavered.
to totter or reel.
The earth quaked and the tower wavered.
noun
an act of wavering, fluttering, or vacillating.
waver
/ ˈweɪvə /
verb
to be irresolute; hesitate between two possibilities
to become unsteady
to fluctuate or vary
to move back and forth or one way and another
(of light) to flicker or flash
noun
the act or an instance of wavering
Other Word Forms
- waverer noun
- unwavered adjective
- wavering adjective
- waveringly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of waver1
Word History and Origins
Origin of waver1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
But this time around Anisimova did not waver from her game plan.
To have the kind of consistent intensity level that has wavered at times this season.
Asked before the game why his team has wavered so much, Roberts struggled to find an answer.
Live sports delivers a product that already has a built-in audience whose loyalty to teams doesn’t waver.
And in the just-perverse-enough “Sanctuary” from the prior year, Qualley’s ruthless, wily dominatrix wavers between vulnerability and authority in the blink of an eye.
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