0 past simple and past participle of waver
1 to lose strength, determination, or purpose, especially temporarily:
I'm afraid my concentration began to waver as lunch approached.
"What are you going to have?" "Er, I'm wavering between the soup and the mushroom quiche."
We especially want to thank the participating children, adolescents, and their parents whose interest in and support for the study have never wavered.
Neither man wavered from his uncompromising position, and both went to the grave claiming that the other was palpably mistaken.
Their commitment to extra-curricular music has never wavered, and head teachers welcome it for the kudos it brings to schools.
Amid this ministerial reshuffle, his attention never wavered from the public.
The very nation he had served now betrayed him; he wavered between revenge, abdication and denial.
They had urged comfort care only, but the family had wavered.
But after 1535 the commitment of the crown to suppress heresy never really wavered.
However, the municipal government has not wavered.