boggle\ the\ mind

boggle\ the\ mind
v. phr. informal
To stop the rational thinking process by virtue of being too fantastic or incredible.

It boggles the mind that John should have been inside a flying saucer!


Словарь американских идиом. — СПб., Изд-во "Лань". . 1997.

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  • boggle the mind — to shock or surprise you. He has a record of arrests for shoplifting that boggles the mind. It just boggles my mind how many people think they re the only ones who are having a hard time …   New idioms dictionary

  • boggle the mind — {v. phr.}, {informal} To stop the rational thinking process by virtue of being too fantastic or incredible. * /It boggles the mind that John should have been inside a flying saucer!/ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • boggle the mind — {v. phr.}, {informal} To stop the rational thinking process by virtue of being too fantastic or incredible. * /It boggles the mind that John should have been inside a flying saucer!/ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • boggle the mind — (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) v. flabbergast, astonish, stagger, amaze, stun, stupefy, *blow one away, *blow one s mind, dumbfound, *knock one s socks off, frighten …   English dictionary for students

  • boggle — boggle, boggling verb. Boggle, originally used of frightened horses, is used with and without an object: the mind can boggle at something and something can boggle the mind (or the imagination etc.). The expression mind boggling, first recorded in …   Modern English usage

  • boggle — I. /ˈbɒgəl / (say boguhl) verb (i) (boggled, boggling) 1. to take alarm; start with fright. 2. to hesitate, as if afraid to proceed; waver. 3. to be overwhelmed: *The mind boggles at what international tourists staying at city hotels think when… …  

  • boggle — verb (boggled; boggling) Etymology: perhaps from bogle Date: 1598 intransitive verb 1. to start with fright or amazement ; be overwhelmed < the mind boggles at the research needed > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • boggle — [bäg′əl] vi. boggled, boggling [< Scot bogle, specter; prob. < ME bugge, specter (as in BUGBEAR); now assoc. with BUNGLE] 1. to be startled or frightened (at); shy away 2. to hesitate (at); have scruples 3. to be or become confused or… …   English World dictionary

  • mind-bog|gling — «MYND BOG lihng», adjective. causing the mind to boggle; overwhelming: »mind boggling calculations in enormous sums …   Useful english dictionary

  • boggle — UK [ˈbɒɡ(ə)l] / US [ˈbɑɡ(ə)l] verb Word forms boggle : present tense I/you/we/they boggle he/she/it boggles present participle boggling past tense boggled past participle boggled 1) [intransitive/transitive] if the mind boggles, or if something… …   English dictionary

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