stagger
vi. 蹒跚; 犹豫; 动摇
vt. 使蹒跚,使摇摆; 使犹豫; 错开时间; 使吃惊
If you stagger, you walk very unsteadily, for example because you are ill or drunk.
He lost his balance, staggered back against the rail and toppled over...
他失去平衡,往后趔趄了一下,撞到栏杆摔倒了。
He was staggering and had to lean on the bar.
他走路摇摇晃晃,不得不靠在吧台上。
If you say that someone or something staggers on, you mean that it is only just succeeds in continuing.
Truman allowed him to stagger on for nearly another two years.
杜鲁门允许他又硬撑了近两年。
...a government that staggered from crisis to crisis.
在一次又一次危机中勉强维持的政府
If something staggers you, it surprises you very much.
The whole thing staggers me.
整个事件让我震惊。
To stagger things such as people's holidays or hours of work means to arrange them so that they do not all happen at the same time.
During the past few years the government has staggered the summer vacation periods for students.
在过去几年里,政府将学生放暑假的时间相互错开。
1. an unsteady uneven gait
1. walk as if unable to control one's movements;
2. walk with great difficulty;
3. to arrange in a systematic order;
4. astound or overwhelm, as with shock;
He gave a stagger on hearing the news.
他听到这一消息两腿摇晃起来.
The feeling is a distant contrail then, that is the person walks in time stagger originally.
感觉那是条遥远的轨迹, 那是人在时间交错的行走原本.
His resolution had begun to stagger.
他的意志开始动摇了.
They grope in darkness with no light, And He makes them stagger like a drunken man.
伯12:25他们无光 、 在黑暗中摸索、又使他们东倒西歪、像醉酒的人一样.
Welding the welds which are stagger first, then is the straight ang long weld.
先焊错开的端焊缝, 后焊直通长焊缝.