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TOEIC Link Part 5: waver versus waiver

Waver is a verb meaning to hesitate or become unsteady. Waiver is a noun meaning a formal giving up of a right or requirement. The two words sound alike but never overlap in meaning, and Part 5 tests the hesitate sense of waver against the legal-document sense of waiver.

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TOEIC Link Part 5: waver versus waiver

Waver and waiver are near-homophones — they sound almost identical — but they share no meaning, and Part 5 uses that gap to set traps. Waver is a verb meaning to hesitate, become unsteady, or fluctuate. Waiver is a noun meaning a formal giving up of a right, claim, or requirement (or the document that records it). Because business passages mention both wavering commitment and signed waivers, the test can put either word in play. For another pair of near-homophones separated only by meaning, see waive versus wave, and for a confusable noun-verb pair, see device versus devise.

The core rule: hesitate versus give-up document

  • waver (verb) = to hesitate, falter, or fluctuate: Demand for the product never wavered despite the price increase.
  • waiver (noun) = a formal relinquishing of a right or requirement, or the document recording it: All participants must sign a liability waiver.

A memory hook: waiver is a doc that records you waive a right — it keeps the i of waive. Waver has no i; picture a flag that wavers (wavers) in the wind, unsteady.

How to read the slot

Part of speech is the fastest clue.

  • waver is a verb describing an action or state — hesitating, fluctuating, faltering. It follows a subject and often pairs with never, begin to, or without: confidence began to waver, stood firm without wavering. If the slot needs a verb meaning hesitate, choose waver.
  • waiver is a noun naming a thing — a document or the act of giving something up. It follows sign, grant, request, a, or the: request a waiver, granted a fee waiver. If the slot needs a noun meaning a formal release, choose waiver.

So the fastest test: is something hesitating or fluctuating (waver), or is it a formal giving-up of a right (waiver)?

Common Part 5 traps

  • "never / began to / without (blank)" is waver. An adverb or auxiliary plus a hesitation meaning signals the verb: her resolve did not waver.
  • "sign / grant / request a (blank)" is waiver. A determiner or transaction verb plus a document signals the noun: the bank granted a waiver of the late fee.
  • Watch the i. Waiver (with i) is the document; waver (no i) is the hesitation. Dropping or adding the i is the single most common error this pair tests.
  • Do not use waiver as a verb. You do not waiver a fee — you waive it (verb) or grant a waiver (noun). See waive versus wave for the verb form.

Quick check

Decide whether the slot means hesitate (waver) or a formal release document (waiver), then choose.

  1. Each climber had to sign a (blank) acknowledging the risks.
  2. The CEO did not (blank) in her commitment to the merger.
  3. The university granted a tuition (blank) to students in financial need.
  4. Support for the proposal began to (blank) after the budget was revealed.

Answers: 1. waiver — formal release document. 2. waver — hesitate. 3. waiver — formal release. 4. waver — hesitate / fluctuate.

Why this pair matters on TOEIC

Business and legal passages use both senses constantly — commitment, demand, and confidence that may waver, and the waivers that customers, employees, and participants sign to release a right or requirement. Because the words sound almost the same, you can never rely on pronunciation; lock onto meaning and part of speech instead. An auxiliary plus a hesitation meaning means the verb waver; a determiner plus a document means the noun waiver. For the verb that pairs with the noun waiver, compare waive versus wave.