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Waver   /wˈeɪvər/   Listen
Waver

verb
(past & past part. wavered; pres. part. wavering)
1.
Pause or hold back in uncertainty or unwillingness.  Synonyms: hesitate, waffle.
2.
Be unsure or weak.  Synonym: falter.
3.
Move hesitatingly, as if about to give way.  Synonym: falter.
4.
Move or sway in a rising and falling or wavelike pattern.  Synonyms: fluctuate, vacillate.
5.
Move back and forth very rapidly.  Synonyms: flicker, flitter, flutter, quiver.
6.
Sway to and fro.  Synonym: weave.
7.
Give off unsteady sounds, alternating in amplitude or frequency.  Synonym: quaver.
noun
1.
Someone who communicates by waving.
2.
The act of pausing uncertainly.  Synonyms: falter, faltering, hesitation.
3.
The act of moving back and forth.  Synonyms: flicker, flutter.



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"Waver" Quotes from Famous Books



... instantly turned her head, and looked resolutely in the opposite direction. She felt that the answer to Sir Peter's question belonged to John. Sir Peter saw John waver; he caught his glance at Phyllis; and, like a good ...
— Old Valentines - A Love Story • Munson Aldrich Havens

... track leading past our deserted hut and up between the granite pinnacles on which, when the sunset touched them, I had so often gazed. We had followed it up beyond the pines and over a pass leading out among a range of undulating foot-hills, which seemed to waver and lose heart a dozen times before making up their minds to unite and climb, and be a snowcapped mountain. But they mounted to the snows at length, and the snows had driven down the stag which, under Marc'antonio's guidance, I ...
— Sir John Constantine • Prosper Paleologus Constantine

... market, and, finding them promptly taken up, had gone about with many pious exclamations of thankfulness and sinister remarks. Many smaller holders followed suit, and yet never for a moment did the market waver. Gradually it leaked out that Scarlett Trent was the buyer, and public interest leaped up at once. Would Trent be able to face settling-day without putting his vast holdings upon the market? If so the bulls were going to have the worst knock they had had for years—and yet—and ...
— A Millionaire of Yesterday • E. Phillips Oppenheim

... been that of physical weakness; confronted in this way with the problem of fraternity, he did not waver any longer. On the threshold of safety, he turned straight back into the jaws of destruction. He had not emerged from that darkness and depth of earth, to descend into a lower profundity and a ...
— The Son of Clemenceau • Alexandre (fils) Dumas

... as to many things; but there are principles lying at the root of human life which are invincible to all doubt. We can demonstrate many things; but there are natural realities beyond our power of demonstration. On the side of sense, all things seem to fluctuate and waver in uncertainty; on the side of mere intellect we soon cross the limit of our powers. But Humanity is more than either sense or intellect. There is, as he believes, a primitive endowment of spiritual instinct in man, which looks forth upon a higher ...
— Pascal • John Tulloch


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