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vacillate
/ ˈæɪˌɪ /
verb
to fluctuate in one's opinions; be indecisive
to sway from side to side physically; totter or waver
Other 51Թ Forms
- vacillator noun
- ˌˈپDz noun
- ˈˌٴǰ noun
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of vacillate1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of vacillate1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The American people appear to be vacillating between learned helplessness and mass disinhibition.
It was the first in a series of scary scenes for Brinkley, whose feelings for Joel vacillated between veneration, unconditional love and abject fear.
He attributed the vacillating accounts to Phillip’s plight as a witness who “saw his mother murdered before his very eyes” but still loved the killer.
The other is that the stock market has so many reasons to vacillate just now that tariff announcements may not matter very much.
Democrats, who have vacillated over how much to criticize Israel or fight back against Trump, largely remained silent over the renewed Israeli offensive.
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