boggle
English
WOTD – 24 June 2009
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Verb
boggle (third-person singular simple present boggles, present participle boggling, simple past and past participle boggled)
- (intransitive) To be bewildered, dumbfounded, or confused.
- He boggled at the surprising news.
- The mind boggles.
- 1661, Joseph Glanvill, The Vanity of Dogmatizing, London: Henry Eversden, Chapter 14, p. 131,
- […] we start and boggle at what is unusual: and like the Fox in the fable at his first view of the Lyon, we cannot endure the sight of the Bug-bear, Novelty.
- 1685, Isaac Barrow, Of Contentment, Patience and Resignation to the Will of God. Several Sermons, London: Brabazon Aylmer, Sermon 4, pp. 127-128,
- They are best qualified to thrive in [this world] […] whose designs all tend to their own private advantage, without any regard to the publick, or to the good of others; who can use any means conducible to such designs, bogling at nothing which serveth their purpose […]
- 1795, Mary Wollstonecraft, letter to Gilbert Imlay dated 4 October, 1795, in Mary Wollstonecraft: Letters to Imlay, London: Kegan Paul, 1879, p. 182,
- From the tenour of your last letter however, I am led to imagine, that you have formed some new attachment.—If it be so, let me earnestly request you to see me once more, and immediately. This is the only proof I require of the friendship you profess for me. I will then decide, since you boggle about a mere form.
- 1969, Maya Angelou, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, New York: Bantam, 1971, Chapter 15, p. 82,
- My imagination boggled at the punishment I would deserve […]
- (transitive) To confuse or mystify; overwhelm.
- The vastness of space really boggles the mind.
- The oddities of quantum mechanics can boggle the minds of students and experienced physicists alike.
- (US, dialect) To embarrass with difficulties; to bungle or botch.
- (intransitive, obsolete) To dissemble; to play fast and loose (with someone or something).
- 1643, James Howell, The True Informer, London, p. 32,
- I would be loth to exchange consciences with them, and boggle so with God Almighty; but these men by a new kind of Metaphysick have found out a way to abstract the Person of the King from his Office to make his Soveraigntie a kinde of Platonick Idea hovering in the aire, while they visibly attempt to assail and destroy his person […]
- 1643, James Howell, The True Informer, London, p. 32,
Derived terms
Translations
to be bewildered, dumbfounded, or confused
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to confuse or mystify; overwhelm
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Etymology 2
Noun
boggle (plural boggles)
- Alternative form of bogle
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