0 to lose strength, determination, or purpose, especially temporarily: --
"What are you going to have?" "Er, I'm wavering between the soup and the mushroom quiche."
I'm afraid my concentration began to waver as lunch approached.
1 to begin to doubt or lose your determination to do something: --
I have wavered on that over the years.
There are those who wavered, but the alliance came through unscathed.
They have temporised, wavered at home and blustered abroad.
I have not wavered in my judgment that the total amount of £100 million was about the right figure.
I have never wavered in my view that a man should not be put in jeopardy a second time.
When citizens see their governments wavering from one to the other, who can blame them if they feel alien to the process itself?
They have wavered between saying that the price of carpets is too high, and that the price is too low.
The intended audience wavers back and forth between students and colleagues.