verb. (colloquial).—To astound; to stagger, either physically or mentally. [O. E., FLAB = to frighten + GAST = to scare.] Fr., abalober; baba (from ébahi = astounded); épater (= flatten out). Sp., quedarse de, or hecho, una pieza (= ‘knocked all of a heap’). See FLOORED.

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  1772.  Annual Register, ‘On New Words.’ Now we are FLABBERGASTED and bored from morning to night.

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  1823.  BADCOCK (‘Jon Bee’), Dictionary of the Turf, etc., p. 79. His colleagues were FLABBERGASTED when they heard of Castlereagh’s sudden death.

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  1837.  R. H. BARHAM, The Ingoldsby Legends, ‘The Brothers of Birchington.’ He was quite ‘FLABBERGASTED’ to see the amount.

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  1841.  Punch, vol. I., p. 261. We rather just imagine they will be not a little puzzled and FLABBERGASTED to discover the meaning or wit of some of those elegant phrases.

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  1864.  Derby Day, p. 67. You’re sort of FLABBERGASTED. It’s taken all the wind out of you like, and you feel like an old screw a blowing up Highgate Hill.

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  1889.  Licensed Victuallers’ Gazette, 18 Jan. Poor Clarke was completely FLABBERGASTED.

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  1891.  National Observer, 1 Aug. In no other sport is the laudator temporis acti so completely FLABBERGASTED as here.

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