staggering
English
editPronunciation
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Verb
editstaggering
- present participle and gerund of stagger
Adjective
editstaggering (comparative more staggering, superlative most staggering)
- Incredible, overwhelming, amazing.
- The army suffered a staggering defeat.
- 1960 December, Voyageur, “The Mountain Railways of the Bernese Oberland”, in Trains Illustrated, page 754:
- It is this stretch which provides what is perhaps the most staggering scenic prospect of all; the impression made on the mind by the overwhelming height of the Eiger, towering over the train, is almost impossible to describe.
- Lurching, floundering.
Derived terms
editTranslations
editincredible, overwhelming, amazing
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Translations
editNoun
editstaggering (plural staggerings)
- The motion of one who staggers.
- 1837, “Memoirs of Mirabeau”, in The Westminster Review, volume 26, page 436:
- There are to whom the gods, in their bounty, give glory: but far oftener it is given in wrath, as a curse and a poison; disturbing the whole inner health and industry of the man; leading onward through dizzy staggerings and tarantula jiggings […]
- The condition of being staggered or amazed.
- 1738, Ebenezer Erskine, The Annals of Redeeming Love:
- But these doubts, and fears, and staggerings, although they may be in the believer, yet they are not in his faith; these things argue the infirmity of his faith, indeed; but under all this, faith is fighting for the victory […]
- In animation, the repetition of a sequence of frames to show struggling effort
References
edit- “staggering”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.