Vanishing, swerving, evermore curving again into sight, Softly the sand-beach wavers away to a dim gray looping of light.
When left to his private thoughts he wavers uncertainly to and fro; death is a sleep; a sleep, it may be, troubled with dreams.
So wags and wavers this unrestful World, day after day, month after month.
Religious after a fashion, he wavers between "the God of the Jews" and the deity after whom he was named and whom he calls his god.
His faith wavers only for a moment; it never wholly loosens its hold.
Plato himself wavers about it; gives different explanations, and sometimes professes ignorance, sometimes talks about it confidently ib.
Plato himselfwavers about it; gives different explanations, and sometimes professes ignorance, sometimes talks about it confidently.
Time rules but mortals, wavers even for men; Should Truth inhabit such a meteor’s den?
In the development of his argument Kant also wavers between two very different definitions of this idealism, as being denial of immediate certainty and as denial of all certainty.
But he never wavers in the view that the completeness of a division cannot be guaranteed on empirical grounds.
George Eliot's usually firm grip on character wavers into strange self-contradiction in her delineations of Esther Lyon.
In this regard it is certainly not without significance that the figure of the High Priest Joshua in Zechariah waversbetween the Messiah (Zemah) and a mere forerunner of the latter.
She wavers as in a dream, and at length moves mechanically across the room, obeying him.
The VICAR wavers a moment, and then staggers out silently through the door, right.
Her voice wavers so distressingly that he thinks she is about to lose all control over it; but no!
Her voice waversas she utters the last few words, and she stops abruptly.
For lying broad awake, long ere the dawn, Staring against the dark, the blank of space Opens immeasurably, and thy face Wavers and glimmers there and is withdrawn.
The life within me, It sinks and wavers like this cone of flame, 45 Beyond which I scarce dare look onward!
The life within me, It sinks and wavers like this cone of flame, Beyond which I scarce dare look onward!
But he wavers in his superstition, just as he wavers in his conception of the Divine government of the world.
Thus all stands fast by Thine old decree, Nothing wavers in Nature's plan: In all her changes she bows to Thee: Yea, all stands fast but Man.
There was a brief second in which Hugh's mind wavered, as the flame of a candle wavers in a sudden draught.
Hugh's mind wavered, as the flame of a candle wavers in a sudden draught.
The NET wavers a moment, with an effect of disappointment, then disappears.
The drop-curtain wavers and is rising, when a voice rings out, "Not yet!
I have particular reasons for going to Lespel's; I hear he wavers toward a Tory conspiracy of some sort,' said Beauchamp.
An occasional drunken man or woman wavers along, but generally their faces and their conditions are both familiar.
A path that wavers from side to side, especially if the turns be from one bush to another, and that is only a light trail making an even line of wear over the inequalities of the ground--that is a path that children make.
The shadowy line between reason and faith waverswith him.
The sick heart wavers and quivers; the cause of its disease is love of the world; the remedy, the love of God.
Her hoop wavers an instant, But she catches it up on her stick.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "wavers" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.