If that hasn't set your heart aquiver, the clincher is that the site has been producedby the Department for Education and Skills.
aquiver in American English
(əˈkwɪvər)
adjective
(usually used predicatively)
in a state of trepidation or vibrant agitation; trembling; quivering
The bamboo thicket was aquiver with small birds and insects
The exciting news set me aquiver
Word origin
[1880–85; a-1 + quiver1]This word is first recorded in the period 1880–85. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: barnstorm, irredentist, jackpot, pari-mutuel, regionalisma- is a reduced form of the Old English preposition on, meaning “on,” “in,” “into,” “to,” “toward,” preserved before a noun in a prepositionalphrase, forming a predicate adjective or an adverbial element (afoot; abed; ashore; aside; away), or before an adjective (afar; aloud; alow), as a moribund prefix with a verb (acknowledge), and in archaic and dialectal use before a present participle in -ing (set the bells aringing); and added to a verb stem with the force of a present participle (ablaze; agape; aglow; astride; and originally, awry)
Examples of 'aquiver' in a sentence
aquiver
The dreams of a land are aquiver.
Times, Sunday Times (2008)
The candle sets their billowing clothes aquiver, and is about to singe and set the piper's sleeve on fire.