0 past simple and past participle of boggle
1 to (cause something or someone to) have difficulty imagining or understanding something:
It boggles the imagination, doesn't it?
He boggled at the suggestion.
This situation has boggled my mind for years.
He is boggled, too, and so he should be.
The ordinary small property-owner is simply boggled when he looks at the form.
I think the imagination of a great many people rather boggled at devolving the whole gamut of power upon a single regional manager.
He let his imagination run to the point where it boggled.
He has not boggled over any of the points.
My mind has been completely boggled—if that is the right term to use.
We would not have boggled at or fallen out about a figure of 14 instead of 12, or 10 instead of 12.