Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Ter·gi·ver·sate
    /ˈtərjəvərˌsāt/

    verb

    • 1. make conflicting or evasive statements; equivocate: "the more she tergiversated, the greater grew the ardency of the reporters for an interview"
    • 2. change one's loyalties; be apostate.
  2. Tergiversate is a verb that means to engage in tergiversation, which is to show reluctance or hesitation in making a decision or choice. The word comes from Latin and was first used in 1590.

  3. People also ask

  4. Tergiversate definition: to change repeatedly one's attitude or opinions with respect to a cause, subject, etc.; equivocate. . See examples of TERGIVERSATE used in a sentence.

  5. Use the verb tergiversate when you need a fancy way to describe someone who's beating around the bush, or being deliberately unclear. A politician who really doesn't want to answer a reporter's question is likely to tergiversate, or talk and talk without ever taking a definitive stand.

  6. Tergiversate means to change sides or loyalties, or to be evasive or ambiguous. Learn the word origin, synonyms, pronunciation, and usage examples of tergiversate from Collins English Dictionary.

  7. Tergiversate means to use evasions or ambiguities, or to change sides or loyalties. Find the origin, pronunciation, and translations of this word, as well as related terms and examples.

  8. Tergiversate means to make statements that deliberately hide the truth or that avoid answering a question directly, or to remove your support from one person, group, or religion and begin to support another. Learn how to pronounce, use, and synonymize this formal verb with Oxford.

  9. tergiversate in American English. (ˈtɜrdʒɪvərˌseɪt ) verb intransitive Word forms: ˈtergiverˌsated or ˈtergiverˌsating. 1. to desert a cause, party, etc.; become a renegade; apostatize. 2.

  1. People also search for