staggering
[ stag-uh-ring ]
/ ˈstæg ə rɪŋ /
adjective
tending to stagger or overwhelm: a staggering amount of money required in the initial investment.
OTHER WORDS FROM staggering
stag·ger·ing·ly, adverb un·stag·ger·ing, adjectiveWords nearby staggering
stagger,
stagger head,
staggerbush,
staggered directorships,
staggered hours,
staggering,
staggering bob,
staggers,
staggy,
staghorn,
staghorn coral
Definition for staggering (2 of 2)
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, adjectiveExample sentences from the Web for staggering
British Dictionary definitions for staggering (1 of 2)
staggering
/ (ˈstæɡərɪŋ) /
adjective
astounding or overwhelming; shocking
a staggering increase in demand
Derived forms of staggering
staggeringly, adverbBritish Dictionary definitions for staggering (2 of 2)
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