Bible Dictionaries
Stagger

Webster's Dictionary

(1):

(n.) A disease of horses and other animals, attended by reeling, unsteady gait or sudden falling; as, parasitic staggers; appopletic or sleepy staggers.

(2):

(n.) An unsteady movement of the body in walking or standing, as if one were about to fall; a reeling motion; vertigo; - often in the plural; as, the stagger of a drunken man.

(3):

(n.) To begin to doubt and waver in purposes; to become less confident or determined; to hesitate.

(4):

(n.) To move to one side and the other, as if about to fall, in standing or walking; not to stand or walk with steadiness; to sway; to reel or totter.

(5):

(n.) To cease to stand firm; to begin to give way; to fail.

(6):

(v. t.) To cause to doubt and waver; to make to hesitate; to make less steady or confident; to shock.

(7):

(v. t.) To cause to reel or totter.

(8):

(n.) Bewilderment; perplexity.

(9):

(v. t.) To arrange (a series of parts) on each side of a median line alternately, as the spokes of a wheel or the rivets of a boiler seam.

Bibliography Information
Webster, Noah. Entry for 'Stagger'. Noah Webster's American Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/​dictionaries/​eng/​web/​s/stagger.html. 1828.