verging on the• But he had a mild, good-humoured, articulate side, verging on theacademic, abjuring the sensational.• The Cabinet seemed to him to have a reputation of worthiness verging on thedull.• He was verging on thegrotesque.• After overheating in 1989, the market may be verging on the over-cautious today.• This has, in point of fact, always struck me as behaviourverging on thepathological.• The joke is that this louche, style-setting exuberance took place in a conservativetownverging on theprovincial.• Their desire to play an expansive game is often dangerous, verging on the suicidal.
(1300-1400)Old French“long pole”, from Latinvirga; from within the verge“within the area controlled by someone who carried a pole as a sign of authority”