Infirm vs Faltering - What's the difference?
infirm | faltering | Related terms |
Weak or ill, not in good health.
* Shakespeare
Irresolute; weak of mind or will.
* Burke
* Shakespeare
Fail; unstable; insecure.
* South
To contradict, to provide proof that something is not.
hesitancy
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=March 29, author=Barry Unsworth, title=Never Far From Despair, work=New York Times
, passage=But it is the doubt thrown on the prospect of arrival, the falterings of purpose and belief, the renewals of hope that give the novel its drive and energy. }}
Infirm is a related term of faltering.
As verbs the difference between infirm and faltering
is that infirm is to contradict, to provide proof that something is not while faltering is .As an adjective infirm
is weak or ill, not in good health.As a noun faltering is
hesitancy.infirm
English
Adjective
(er)- He was infirm of body but still keen of mind, and though it looked like he couldn't walk across the room, he crushed me in debate.
- A poor, infirm , weak, and despised old man.
- An infirm judgment.
- Infirm of purpose!
- He who fixes on false principles treads on infirm ground.
Verb
(en verb)- The thought is that you see an episode of observation, experiment, or reasoning as confirming or infirming a hypothesis depending on whether your probability for it increases or decreases during the episode.
Antonyms
* (l)faltering
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)citation