0 present 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.
When we turn our minds to a ' mystery ' (in any but the first sense) we feel our minds ' boggling ', or giving out.
The sheer volume of paperwork created by fines is mind boggling.
They have been boggling about the cost in a penny-wise and pound-foolish manner.
Of course, the cascade effect of having to rehouse 700 families—as may be the case — is mind boggling, particularly in present circumstances.
Do let us have an end to all this haggling and boggling to which we have become accustomed in the last few years.
I am so grateful to him, but nobody is "boggling".
I do not think there is any point in boggling about this.