stagger
[ stag-er ]
/ ˈstæg ər /
verb (used without object)
verb (used with object)
noun
Origin of stagger
1520–30; earlier
stacker to reel, Middle English
stakeren < Old Norse
stakra to reel, equivalent to
stak(a) to stagger +
-ra frequentative suffix
SYNONYMS FOR stagger
1
Stagger,
reel,
totter suggest an unsteady manner of walking. To
stagger is successively to lose and regain one's equilibrium and the ability to maintain one's direction:
to stagger with exhaustion, a heavy load, or intoxication. To
reel is to sway dizzily and be in imminent danger of falling:
to reel when faint with hunger. To
totter is to move in a shaky, uncertain, faltering manner and suggests the immediate likelihood of falling from weakness or feebleness:
An old man tottered along with a cane.
3 vacillate.
5 astound, confound, dumfound.
7 alternate.
OTHER WORDS FROM stagger
stag·ger·er, noun out·stag·ger, verb (used with object) un·stag·gered, adjectiveWords nearby stagger
Example sentences from the Web for stagger
British Dictionary definitions for stagger
stagger
/ (ˈstæɡə) /
verb
noun
the act or an instance of staggering
a staggered arrangement on a biplane, etc
See also
staggers
Derived forms of stagger
staggerer, nounWord Origin for stagger
C13 dialect
stacker, from Old Norse
staka to push