[
UK
/dʒˈʌɡəl/
]
[ US /ˈdʒəɡəɫ/ ]
[ US /ˈdʒəɡəɫ/ ]
NOUN
- the act of rearranging things to give a misleading impression
- throwing and catching several objects simultaneously
VERB
-
manipulate by or as if by moving around components
juggle an account so as to hide a deficit - throw, catch, and keep in the air several things simultaneously
-
hold with difficulty and balance insecurely
the player juggled the ball - influence by slyness
-
deal with simultaneously
She had to juggle her job and her children
How To Use juggle In A Sentence
- But it is vital to keep moving as new dads need to be in the best of health to juggle their job with night feeds and changing. The Sun
- I was trying to juggle the two. The Guide to Lesbian and Gay Parenting
- He juggles multiple systems of rhythm, melody, structure and timbre.
- He chested down a cross on the edge of the box, juggled it once on his foot with back to goal, turned and shot with his left.
- Even big, subsidised companies have been made to juggle sponsorships and have success.
- I was trying to juggle the two. The Guide to Lesbian and Gay Parenting
- But they should not assume he is a good juggler just because he kind of juggled to the music with three balls. Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » Beatles juggling redux
- Vancouver - Weather conditions were improving ahead of the men's downhill at Whistler Creekside Monday in good news for organizers who have had to rejuggle their Olympics alpine ski programme. The Earth Times Online Newspaper
- Hotels must juggle cancellations, no-shows, guests who extend their stays beyond their original reservations and rooms that are taken out of service for repairs.
- More daring is the Japanese Juggler, which has white rum with chopped pineapple, orange, pineapple, and grape juice with coconut cream.