veering

[ US /ˈvɪɹɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /vˈi‍əɹɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of turning aside suddenly
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use veering In A Sentence

  • The researchers noted that the helicopters stayed impressively true to the calculated flight paths, never veering more than 12-inches off course.
  • One of the beauties of Sintra, though, is that you can escape the crowds, literally within a minute, by veering off on one of the bowered paths leading up the Serra.
  • And the government's reaction, veering in panic-stricken indecision from one wildly contradictory solution to another, is also traditional.
  • This climbs steadily before veering E, traverses back below a steep section and turns right again to cross the E ridge of the hill.
  • That the problems of thinking about the other in romantic love can come to seem ethical -- veering around questions of projection, violation, respect -- as well as epistemological, is the burden of this essay; and my argument is that the Romantic (capital R) and the romantic (little r) are conjoined in the ethics of thinking. Thinking about the Other in Romantic Love
  • Art opines, "Prima veering into 'Twist & Shout' at the end of 'Civilization' is a mindblower! Michael Sigman: 'Civilization' and its Disc Contents
  • Such encounters were relatively common in the harum-scarum chaos of an early solar system that teemed with veering planets and asteroids. The Loneliest Planet
  • If a novel with a pink popsicle on the cover sounds to you like literature veering into the tedious, high-pitched and bloggy, fear not.
  • His mood could change in an instant and he would keep veering off the topic of conversation, forgetting what they had been talking about.
  • Moments before crashing, the jet was seen veering sharply to the right.
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy