Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Jit·ter
    /ˈjidər/

    noun

    • 1. feelings of extreme nervousness: "a bout of the jitters"
    • 2. slight irregular movement, variation, or unsteadiness, especially in an electrical signal or electronic device: "picture jitter"

    verb

    • 1. act nervously: "an anxious student who jittered at any provocation"
  2. IPA guide. When you're really anxious and jumpy, you can say you have the jitters. Your jitters might make it hard to stand calmly in front of an audience and deliver a speech. Jitters is an informal but useful noun that captures the fidgety, nervous feeling that everyone gets sometimes.

  3. 5 days ago · Definition of 'jitters' Word Frequency. jitters. (dʒɪtəʳz ) plural noun. If you have the jitters, you feel extremely nervous, for example because you have to do something important or because you are expecting important news . [informal] I had a case of the jitters during my first two speeches.

  4. n. 1. A jittering movement; a tic. 2. jitters A fit of nervousness. Often used with the. 3. a. An unwanted variation in an electronic or optical signal. b. An unwanted variation in the arrival times of a sequence of data packets over a digital network. [Perhaps alteration of chitter .]

  5. verb (used without object) to feel or express nervousness or behave nervously: There are some people who jitter about every new technology. As soon as I’m five minutes late coming home, my parents start jittering. to move rapidly and unevenly, often with small movements: My heartbeat jittered as I waited for the boss in her office.

  6. noun. /ˈdʒɪtəz/. /ˈdʒɪtərz/. (often the jitters) [plural] (informal) feelings of being anxious and nervous, especially before an important event or before having to do something difficult. I always get the jitters before exams. Louise had pre-wedding jitters. Extra Examples.

  7. (the) jitters, nervousness; a feeling of fright or uneasiness: Every time I have to make a speech, I get the jitters. fluctuations in the image on a television screen or in copy received by facsimile transmission, caused by interference or by momentary failures of synchronization.

  8. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English jit‧ters /ˈdʒɪtəz $ -ərz/ noun [ plural] informal a nervous worried feeling, especially before an important event The jitters are worst in the capital, where 61% of people are fearful of a terrorist attack. Examples from the Corpus jitters • The debt is causing jitters among experts.

  1. People also search for