driving

[ US /ˈdɹaɪvɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /dɹˈa‍ɪvɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of controlling and steering the movement of a vehicle or animal
  2. hitting a golf ball off of a tee with a driver
    he sliced his drive out of bounds
ADJECTIVE
  1. having the power of driving or impelling
    the driving force was his innate enthusiasm
    an impulsive force
    a driving personal ambition
  2. acting with vigor
    responsibility turned the spoiled playboy into a driving young executive
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How To Use driving In A Sentence

  • Which is stupid, considering the drivers around here A: Don't normally stop for people and in fact have been caught trying to sneak ~around~ them and B: I've been nicked several times and almost hit three times different instances last summer attempting to obey the biking laws, none of those for mistakes on my part as I've been scared shitless at the lack of aware driving that's crept over my town. The funny thing about Pain..... (Let's talk trauma!)
  • It bothered me a little that I didn't have a pickup, and I couldn't see doing much off road driving with my Mustang fastback.
  • Have you got any ID? A driving licence or cheque card will do.
  • The time it takes to start or stop a stopwatch is the same amount of time it would take for someone driving under the influence to lose control of their vehicle, about seven tenths of a second. News/local from www.dailyamerican.com
  • Suppose you were driving your car on a rainy night, or an extremely hot night. Christianity Today
  • For a start, when you drive through the gate, instead of just driving through just a field of grass, you actually drive through copses of trees and little forests.
  • Instead they have further undermined the economy by driving capital and foreign investors out of the country. Times, Sunday Times
  • More serious motoring offences such as uninsured driving would carry a £10 surcharge.
  • Furthermore, we found that the number, amplitude and spacing of such flow folds depends on the history of the load driving the extrusion.
  • The wives showed themselves true to stereotype by forever cooking meals containing an abundance of chips and driving to shoe shops in Japanese cabriolets.
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