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    tottering
    /ˈtɒt(ə)rɪŋ/

    adjective

    • 1. (of a person's steps) feeble or unsteady: "she swayed on her feet and took a few tottering steps"
    • 2. (of a structure) shaking or swaying as if about to collapse: "all that was left of this historic building were sections of tottering, smoke-blackened walls"

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  3. Tottering means walking with difficulty, shaking, or becoming weaker. Learn how to use this adjective with sentences and synonyms from Cambridge Dictionary.

  4. Tottering means being in an unstable condition, walking unsteadily, or lacking firmness or stability. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related entries of tottering.

  5. Tottering means walking unsteadily or shakily, or lacking security or stability. Learn how to use this adjective in sentences with synonyms and pronunciation.

  6. Tottering means walking unsteadily or shakily, or lacking security or stability. See how to use this adjective in sentences from various sources, such as The Daily Beast and Project Gutenberg.

  7. adjective. unsteady in gait as from infirmity or old age. “a tottering skeleton of a horse”. synonyms: tottery. unsteady. subject to change or variation. adjective. (of structures or institutions) having lost stability; failing or on the point of collapse. “a tottering empire”.

  8. Tottering means walking unsteadily or shakily, or lacking security or stability. Find the origin, pronunciation, and translations of tottering in English and Spanish.

  9. Totter means to move unsteadily or to sway as if about to fall. It can also be a noun for an unsteady gait. See synonyms, examples, word history and related phrases of totter.