"Titubate" Pronounce,Meaning And Examples

"Titubate" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers

Titubate
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"Titubate" Meaning

To walk or move unsteadily, often as if intoxicated.

"Titubate" Examples

Titubate usage examples

Verb to walk or move unsteadily, as if about to fall, often because of dizziness or weakness.


1. The drunken man stumbled and titubated along the sidewalk, holding onto a lamppost for support.
2. After a few hours without food, she began to feel weak and started to titubate, struggling to stay upright.
3. The earthquake made it difficult for people to walk steady and they titubated, holding onto each other for support.
4. She had been on the boat for too long and was starting to feel the effects of sea sickness, her legs began to titubate beneath her.
5. The dancer struggled to maintain her balance on the uneven stage, her movements became jerky and she started to titubate.

"Titubate" Similar Words

Tittivated

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Tittivating

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Adorning or decorating the face with face powder, rouge, &c.

Tittle-tattle

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Gossip or trivial talk, especially about other people's private lives.

Tittle-tattling

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Gossiping or talking about someone's personal affairs, often in an unkind and uninvited manner.

Tittle

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Tittup

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Titty

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Tituba

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Tituba was a slave from present-day Barbados, who was brought to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1688. She was one of the first enslaved Africans to be brought to the American colonies. She was a spirit medium and a healer, and was known for her expertise in "obeah," a form of folk magic.<br><br>In 1692, Tituba was one of the first people to be accused of practicing witchcraft in the Salem witch trials. She confessed to practicing witchcraft and named several other women, including Rebecca Nurse and Elizabeth Hubbard, as being involved in the supposed conspiracy.<br><br>Tituba's confession likely led to a significant increase in accusations of witchcraft in Salem, and she played a key role in the early part of the Salem witch trials. Her testimony, which included descriptions of African and Native American spiritual practices, was misunderstood and used as evidence of witchcraft by the colonists.<br><br>There is still some debate among historians about the accuracy of Tituba's confession, with some arguing that she was coerced into making false confessions due to the threat of physical punishment. She was imprisoned for a year and 4 months before she was tried, but she was later released after the witch trials subsided.

Titubating

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Titubation

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Titular

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Titularity

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Titularly

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Used in a formal or official manner, especially in order to emphasize or make someone's position, status, or responsibility clear.

Titulary

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Titulature

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Title or distinction bestowed or claimed in accordance with official rules or on the basis of achievement.

Tituled

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Given the word "tituled", I would explain that it is the past tense and past participle of the verb "title", which means to give a name or title to something, often with the intention of emphasizing its importance or significance.